
LA CITA
LA CITA - I
RICK
EL COLLAR - I
EL HIJO
In the smoky cafés of 1913 Madrid, celebrated novelist Ricardo Villarroya sits across from Fuensanta Godoy, his devoted but tormented lover. Their exchange crackles with raw emotion as Fuensanta pleads for affection while Ricardo, exhausted by his own fame and restless intellect, retreats into cynicism. Through vivid, almost theatrical dialogue, the story reveals a man torn between artistic ambition and a yearning for genuine connection.
The narrative unfolds with lyrical prose that captures the intellectual fervor of early‑modernist Spain, painting a portrait of a generation caught between tradition and a feverish desire for new ideas. Listeners will be drawn into Ricardo’s internal debates about destiny, reason, and the price of brilliance, while Fuensanta’s heartfelt pleas expose the tender vulnerability beneath the era’s public bravado. The first act sets a tone of passionate conflict, promising a nuanced exploration of love, ego, and the restless spirit of an artist on the cusp of self‑destruction.
Language
es
Duration
~5 hours (321K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2015-12-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1873–1971
A lively voice of Spanish-language fiction, he helped popularize the short novel in Spain while moving easily between journalism, theater, and storytelling. His long life carried him from Cuba to Europe and, after the Spanish Civil War, into exile in the Americas.
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