Specify Books As El sol de Breda (Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste #3)
Original Title: | El sol de Breda ISBN13 9788420483122 |
Edition Language: | Spanish |
Series: | Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste #3 |
Characters: | Diego Alatriste y Tenorio, Íñigo Balboa y Aguirre, Diego Velázquez, Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Ambrogio Spinola, 1st Marquis of the Balbases, Carmelo Bragado, Angelica de Alquezar, Curro Garrote, Sebastian Copons, Jaime Correas |
Setting: | Oudkerk, Breda(Netherlands) |
Arturo Pérez-Reverte
Paperback | Pages: 254 pages Rating: 3.77 | 3976 Users | 185 Reviews
Explanation In Pursuance Of Books El sol de Breda (Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste #3)
El sol de Breda escenifica las batallas y el asedio de la ciudad de Breda en 1625 por los Tercios españoles en Flandes. El joven vasco Íñigo de Balboa es el narrador, como siempre, pero ahora adquiere en este relato un papel más protagonista: es mochilero del tercio viejo de Cartagena, donde sirve de ayudante a su amo el capitán Alatriste, y empuña por primera vez las armas en el combate. Íñigo será, en esta aventura, testigo del sometimiento de la ciudad por las tropas españolas, y describirá años más tarde al pintor Diego Velázquez, para que los inmortalice en un famoso cuadro, los rostros de los participantes en la batalla: el general Ambrosio Spínola, un respetado guerrero con dotes de político, que abortará el conato de un motín de las tropas, hartas de pelear sin que vean recompensados sus esfuerzos con una paga que nunca llega, y que el general les adelantará de sus acaudaladas arcas o el maestre de campo Pedro de la Daga, despreciativo con sus tropas hasta la crueldad, o el dubitativo capitán Carmelo Bragado y el valiente soldado Sebastián Copons, veteranos todos de las pasadas guerras en Nápoles y camaradas del capitán Alatriste.Declare Based On Books El sol de Breda (Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste #3)
Title | : | El sol de Breda (Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste #3) |
Author | : | Arturo Pérez-Reverte |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 254 pages |
Published | : | January 1st 2000 by Alfaguara (first published 1998) |
Categories | : | Historical. Historical Fiction. Fiction. Adventure. European Literature. Spanish Literature |
Rating Based On Books El sol de Breda (Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste #3)
Ratings: 3.77 From 3976 Users | 185 ReviewsAssessment Based On Books El sol de Breda (Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste #3)
My favorite so far in the Captain Alatriste series. And a serious competition to Bernard Cornwell in his field of expertise of historical novels with great battle descriptions.The first two books in the Alatriste epic were set in Madrid at the beginning of 17 century, and were a mix of swashbuckling and cultural (literature, poetry, dramaturgy) references. The Sun Over Breda discards most of the "artist cafe" distractions in order to focus on the military campaign of Spain and its Catholic2.5 starsWhat can I say? I find myself constantly underwhelmed by this series despite loving other books by Perez-Reverte. I guess I just want a really good historical swashbuckler with a bit of meat on it and despite having been generally underwhelmed by each book in the series so far I keep hoping that Perez-Reverte warms up in the next one. So far in my mind this hasn't happened.There's nothing terrible about this story: we get to see Captain Alatriste through the eyes of our narrator Inigo
2.5 starsWhat can I say? I find myself constantly underwhelmed by this series despite loving other books by Perez-Reverte. I guess I just want a really good historical swashbuckler with a bit of meat on it and despite having been generally underwhelmed by each book in the series so far I keep hoping that Perez-Reverte warms up in the next one. So far in my mind this hasn't happened.There's nothing terrible about this story: we get to see Captain Alatriste through the eyes of our narrator Inigo
By coincidence, I read this book in December in Belgium, of which Brel said: "With a sky so gray a canal got lost, with a sky so low a canal got hanged, with the damp westerlies, listen to her hanging in there, this flat country which is mine."I knew the story of the Flanders campaigns, the siege of Oostende and the sack of Antwerpen, from the point of view of Tÿl Uilenspiegel and Lamme Goedzak Pérez-Reverte shows it from the other side of the harquebus, as told by the Vascon 'mochilero' Íñigo
Unlike the previous 2 in that this is about the horrors of 17th cent warfare rather than aristos jockeying for position and duels.More blatant in its's presentation as a "found manuscript", with editorial comment at the end. The usual sprinkling of faux 17th cent poetry, and literary name dropping (Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra and Lope de Vega more often than anyone else).Slightly rambling in places yet hinting frustratingly at Alatriste's past when I wanted whole books on the subject.Nasty and
I am reading this in Spanish, "El sol de Breda," the second volume in the Capitan Alatriste series by Perez-Reverte. The historical backdrop is the invasion of the town of Breda in the Netherlands, owned by Spain, whose surrender to Spinola is depicted in "La rendicion de Breda" by Diego Velazquez in the Prado Museum. Perez-Reverte refers to paintings frequently in his novels; in the first volume, the young hero, Inigo Balboa, falls in love with the princess depicted in "Las Meninas." Readers
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