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Carlos Ruiz Zafón: The Shadow of the Wind (Paperback, 2009, Phoenix)

Hidden in the heart of the old city of Barcelona is the 'Cemetery of Forgotten …

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A bookseller takes his ten-year-old son to the Cemetery of Forgotten Books in Barcelona in 1945, where he is allowed to choose one book. The book he chooses is The shadow of the wind by an almost unknown novelist, Julian Carax.

The boy reads the book and enjoys it, and tries to find other books by the same author, but they are impossible to find, and he soon discovers that others are interested in his book, and he is made several lucrative offers, one from a person named after one of the characters in the book. He refuses them all.

As he grows up, he becomes more interested in solving the mystery of the book, and what happened to its author, and it soon becomes apparent that such a quest is dangerous, and that there are powerful people and forces intent on stopping him.

To say more would be a spoiler, and it is otherwise difficult to describe this book: a literary detective story, a tale of star-crossed lovers, a fantasy novel, an adventure-thriller. It's a cross between [b:Romeo and Juliet|18135|Romeo and Juliet|William Shakespeare|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51Znj16qi9L.SL75.jpg|3349450], [b:The Eyre affair|27003|The Eyre Affair (Thursday Next, #1)|Jasper Fforde|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1309201183s/27003.jpg|3436605] and the film Pan's labyrinth, and more besides. At times, with the description of encounters with the police of the Franco era in Spain, it felt familiar, like the old apartheid South Africa, with echoes of [b:A dry white season|65249|A Dry White Season|André P. Brink|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1170631767s/65249.jpg|63299].

A very good read indeed. I recommend it.