Mauricio o las Elecciones Primarias - Eduardo Mendoza
His encounter with Fontán and his brief flirtation with local politics however bring two women into his life - Clotilde, a young woman who lives with her parents and is underemployed and undervalued at a lawyer's office, and la Porritos an unemployed woman living in deprived conditions who he meets playing guitar and singing at political rallies. Mauricio is just as uncertain and half-hearted with regards to the women as he is in his choice of career, and as a result finds himself in a bit of a mess.
The mismatched relationships and romantic complications that ensue recall similar situations in other Mendoza 'mainstream' novels such as El Año del Diluvio and La Isla Inaudita, but there is comedy to be found in Mauricio's flip comments and his inability to get emotionally in touch with himself with regards to other people's feelings that recalls our unfortunate inmate from the asylum in the author's marvellous mystery/adventure comedies. In this respect, as well as in the incidental details of the author's depiction of Barcelona in the years leading up to the profound changes the city would undergo with the 1992 Olympics, it's thoroughly a Mendoza book and a thoroughly enjoyable one.
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