Críticas:
'A... bold and engaging family history.' * Rory McLean, Sunday Telegraph * 'Skilfully weaves the journeys of grandfather and grandson, separated by almost a century . . .Jacobs . . .embraces South America with the hot, lustrous spirit of carnival' * Tarquin Hall, New Statesman * Entertaining * Sara Wheeler, Daily Telegraph * 'The particular strength of this eloquent, unhurried tale is its depiction of the author's friendship with El Sereno . . . Theirs is a winning Quixote-Panza double act' * Miranda France, Daily Telegraph * 'Jacobs is one of the best writers on all things Spanish' * The Tablet * 'A magical, enraptured book' * John Walsh, Independent * A journey of Chaucerian richness * Barnaby Rogerson, Country Life * A welcome reminder that close encounters of the Mediterranean kind don't have to be all froth and bubble * Anthony Sattin, Sunday Times * A finale worthy of Fellini * Geraldine Cooke, Independent * Michael Jacobs' book does everything a book ought to do: it amuses, delights and instructs * Chris Stewart, author of DRIVING OVER LEMONS * Turbulent, tender, irreverent and funny . . . Sheer delight * Joanne Harris, author of CHOCOLAT * Praise for The Factory of Light: 'A fascinating travel book' * Sunday Times * 'This is more than a travel book . . . it's also a love story' * Nicholas Bagnall, Sunday Telegraph * Michael Jacobs so steeped his youth in erudition that until he was forty he didn't know who the Beatles were. He then burst from this shell and, making up for lost time, plunged into the wilder side of life. This unusual reversal gives him a unique voice, one that combines wit, warmth and wildness and seasons it with enough solid knowledge to give you confidence that you're in good hands. Ghost Train Through the Andes gives full measure of this extraordinary traveller and gifted writer. If you're not up to tramping the Atacama Desert or wandering through Bolivia on the eve of revolution, best let Michael Jacobs do it for you. * Chris Stewart *
Reseña del editor:
It was not until long after his grandmother, Sophie, had died that Michael Jacobs was eventually permitted to read the lengthy and passionate letters that his grandfather Bethel had written her from nine thousand miles away. In these letters, Jacobs discovered a remarkable story of hardship, deprivation and enduring love. His grandfather's work on the railway through the Andes was exhausting and desperately lonely. He had little in common with his fellow workers and became consumed by a mounting despondency, from which only his love for Sophie could save him. But, as the months and years of separation passed, the world in which Sophie was blossoming appeared more and more remote from his own. Michael Jacobs' journey back through time takes him from a rain-swept Hull churchyard to desolate Antofagasta in Chile and to the former silver capital of Potosi. Climbing through ghostly, lunar-like scenery towards the snow-capped summits of the Andes, he follows the route of his grandfather's railway - across giant rocky plateaux, through terrifyingly steep gorges and valleys of tropical lushness, and past grim mining townships buffeted by winds, rain and snow - to reveal an extraordinary love story.. NOTA: El libro no está en español, sino en inglés.
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