
Produced by Eric Eldred, Tonya Allen, Charles Franks and
INTRODUCTION
H. L. MENCKEN. - PROLOGUE - ON INTELLECTUAL LOVE
EGOTISM
I. FUNDAMENTAL IDEAS
HUMBLE AND A WANDERER
DOGMATOPHAGY
NEVERTHELESS, WE CALL OURSELVES MATERIALISTS
IN DEFENSE OF RELIGION
ARCH-EUROPEAN
Set against the restless backdrop of post‑1898 Spain, the story follows a restless young man caught between the dying grandeur of old institutions and the fierce surge of new ideas. As the nation wrestles with political upheaval, the rise of socialism, and a growing anti‑clerical spirit, he drifts through cafés, university halls, and provincial streets, searching for purpose amid the clamor of debates and the lure of personal ambition.
Baroja paints this transitional era with sharp, unflinching realism, letting the city’s noise and the countryside’s quiet both shape the protagonist’s inner turmoil. The novel captures the tension between youthful ego‑driven pursuits and the collective yearning for social change, offering a vivid portrait of a generation on the brink of redefining itself. Listeners will feel the pulse of a society in flux, as the narrator’s candid voice navigates love, disillusionment, and the restless desire to break free from inherited constraints.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (253K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1872–1956
A leading voice of Spain’s Generation of ’98, he wrote sharp, restless novels that looked hard at modern life and the people pushed to its edges. Before literature took over, he even trained and worked as a doctor for a short time.
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