Skip to main content
Spanish Civil War dud
JOHN GREEN is unimpressed by a novel that simply borrows the civil war as a backdrop
dud

Soldiers in the Fog
By Antonio Soler, The Clapton Press, £12.99

THIS Spanish Civil War novel was first published in 1999 in Spanish, under the title El Nombre Que Ahora Digo (The Name I Now Call Out) and was awarded the Premio Primavera de Novela.
 
It is, however, not a historical account of events that took place at that time, nor is it about the international brigades. It plunges us head first into the horror and squalor of war on a purely human level.

It is written in a lyrical prose style which certainly captures atmosphere and that sense of chaos that all wars engender. I felt, however, that the civil war is used here merely as a convenient backdrop for a human interest story and that the author has little interest in casting new light on that significant historical event nor whether he has an opinion on the rights and wrongs of that conflict.

The story is set during the Spanish Civil War, and is quite simple: a young soldier, Gustavo Sintora, arrives in Madrid after Franco’s rebel forces capture Malaga. He is posted to the Republican army’s mobile entertainment unit which is billeted in a mansion on the city’s outskirts and puts on shows for those fighting on the front line. In Madrid he meets Serena Vergara, a seamstress who is destined to become the love of his life.

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
protest
Features / 17 April 2025
17 April 2025
Mountains of research show that online hardcore material harms children by direct exposure and often indirectly - by those men porn inspires. Yet there are still no simple measures like age and content regulation in place, writes JOHN GREEN
mitch main
Culture / 14 April 2025
14 April 2025
JOHN GREEN relishes photography that unfolds a longstanding and poetic relationship with Leeds
oddy
Film of the week / 10 April 2025
10 April 2025
Odysseus’s homecoming myth is treated as a factual story, with strong resonances for our contemporary world. This is an implicit anti-war film that has an urgent relevance, writes JOHN GREEN
punishment
Books / 27 March 2025
27 March 2025
JOHN GREEN recommends an entertaining, if harsh and instructive, study of bullying, discipline and power dynamics in schools and at work
Similar stories
A unit of the Bulgarian International Brigade, 1937
Features / 25 January 2025
25 January 2025
Anti-fascists from around the world will soon be travelling to Spain to commemorate the International Brigades and walk in the footsteps of the bravest of their generation, writes LYNNE WALSH
The Mackenzie-Papineau Battalion monument, in Ottawa, rememb
Book Review / 22 July 2024
22 July 2024
JOHN GREEN suggests you pass on a novelette that recycles the communist past without hope or tangible history
16spanishcivilwar
Features / 29 June 2024
29 June 2024
Teaching youngsters about the International Brigades and the Spanish civil war is vital for a proper understanding of 20th-century history, writes JIM JUMP
8 - Spanish civil war mural (1)
Features / 24 June 2024
24 June 2024
JIM JUMP welcomes the new booklet published by the RMT and International Brigade Memorial Trust about the seafarers and rail workers who fought Franco’s fascism in Spain