
In Los horrores del escalpelo we can find a victorian world that, a priori, seems a copy of the XIXth century, but as the time goes by we can see a drastic conversion in a completely steampunk world, with automata, humans, steam-powered androids... Everything seen through the eye of one of the main characters: Raimundo Aguirre, a Spanish man that, after fighting in a war in America, get desfigured and exiled to a circus of horrors, arriving in this way to London where he will be involved, among other conspirations, in the crimes of Jack "the ripper". Ray, accompanied by Leonardo Torres, will learn values that he hadn't seen in the underworld where had lived until then, he will know about friendship, courage, justice... All of them screened by an underworld veil of prostitution, gangs war...
In the first place, I'm going to highlight the most important failure that I find, and it's that it's a quite thick book with a tiny letter, as it happens in Game of Thrones, so it's hard to carry with you to read at any moment if you like it, and I think that it could have been perfectly divided in three books, because we can find different stories that are continuously crosslinkins and finish in a common end. However, I must say in its favour that it's a well written novel, and that's why it's not hard to read and it's enough to take the book to devour a bunch of pages. In spite of that, it's not just a novel, but it's also a good travel around the XIXth century history, and that's why this story begins around a century and a half after the crimes of the ripper, so, this is a very deep research work (although sometimes it suffers of and overload of information). But what I enjoyed the most was the main character, Raimundo Aguirre, because he appears from the very first moment and, although you don't understand why does he talk about a war in America when you know he's going to end in the underworld of London, as the time goes by you can understand why he is as he is and, without being a usual hero, you get to take love to him, in spite of Lento y Lento (Long and Slow), a Spanish and an English writers that visit Raimundo to know the secrets of the autumn of 1888, two characters, the less, funny.
Summarizing, I think this novel mixes Mary Shelley, Dickens and Conan Doyle seen through the eyes of a contemporary Spanish Bram Stoker. If you have time and calm, I encourage you to read it, although, as I said in the beginning, don't take it a an only work, but a trilogy summarized in an only book.
If you have already taken a look to it, come here and tell us what you think about it. See you in the next post ^^
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En Los horrores del escalpelo encontramos un mundo victoriano que, a priori, parece un calco del siglo XIX, pero con el paso del tiempo vemos una drástica conversión en un mundo completamente steampunk, con autómatas, humanos, androides de funcionamiento a vapor... Todo ello introducido a través de los ojos de un personaje: Raimundo Aguirre, un español que, tras luchar en la guerra en América, se ve desfigurado y desterrado en un circo de los horrores, llegando así a Londres, donde se verá envuelto, entre otras conspiraciones, en los crímenes de Jack "el destripador". Ray, acompañado de Leonardo Torres, aprenderá valores que no ha visto en los bajos fondos donde hasta entonces había vivido, conocerá la amistad, el valor, la justicia... Todos ellos siempre tamizados por un velo de bajos fondos, prostitución, guerras de bandas...

En resumen, creo que se trata de una novela que recoge a Mary Shelley, a Dickens y a Conan Doyle vistos a través de un Bram Stoker español contemporáneo. Si tenéis tiempo y calma, os animo a leerlo, aunque, como ya he dicho al principio, no os lo toméis como una novela única, sino como una trilogía resumida en un único tomo.
Si ya le habéis echado ya un ojo, pasad a contarnos qué os ha parecido. Hasta la próxima ^^
1 Opiniones:
Reconoci la portada al verlo.
La verdad es que reseñas asi animan mucho a la lectura, se pierde el miedo a encontrarse con topicos novelisticos.
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