David Uclés receiving the Premio Nadal award for 'The City of Dead Lights' at the Hotel Palace ceremony in Barcelona.
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David Uclés wins the 82nd Premio Nadal with 'The City of Dead Lights'

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The writer from Jaén, David Uclés, has won the 82nd edition of the Premio Nadal for his novel 'The City of Dead Lights', a work of magical realism set in a darkened Barcelona. The award, worth 30,000 euros, was presented at the traditional January 6 evening at Barcelona's Hotel Palace. In the same ceremony, Francesc Torralba received the Premio Josep Pla for 'Anatomy of Hope'.

The Premio Nadal, the oldest award in Spanish letters, has gone in its 82nd edition to David Uclés (Úbeda, 1990) for 'The City of Dead Lights', a novel imagining a 24-hour blackout in postwar Barcelona, where intellectuals and celebrities from different eras try to restore the light. The jury, made up of Víctor del Árbol, Juan Luis Arsuaga, Inés Martín Rodrigo, Care Santos, and Emili Rosales, unanimously selected this work from 1,207 manuscripts submitted. Uclés, who entered under the pseudonym Oriol Arce and the title 'Another Summer Day Roars', described the novel as 'a love letter to the city' and highlighted its inspiration from authors like Mercè Rodoreda, Montserrat Roig, and Carmen Laforet, to whom he dedicated the prize in Catalan: 'Without their words, without their writing, this novel would not exist'.

The work, to be published on February 4 by Destino (Planeta group), continues the magical realism style of his previous success, 'The Peninsula of Empty Houses' (Siruela, 2024), which has sold 300,000 copies. Characters like Carmen Laforet —accidentally the cause of the blackout—, Antoni Gaudí, Freddie Mercury, Roberto Bolaño, Ana María Matute, and even Ramón y Cajal converge in a temporal crossroads, with surreal touches like Gabriel García Márquez and Carlos Fuentes convincing Mario Vargas Llosa not to have heart surgery. Uclés, who has entered the Nadal annually from 2010 to 2020 and resumed this summer thanks to the Montserrat Roig grant, thanked his family, agents, and Siruela: 'I am the writer I am thanks to them; I love them, they are also my family'.

In parallel, the Premio Josep Pla for Catalan prose, worth 10,000 euros, went to philosopher Francesc Torralba for 'Anatomy of Hope', an essay on the mechanisms of hope in times of crisis. Torralba, a doctor in several fields and prolific author, defended his work as a 'countercultural discourse' against apocalyptic narratives: 'Without hope it is impossible to live, build, and project futures'. Both works will hit shelves on the same day.

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X discussions celebrate David Uclés' win of the 82nd Premio Nadal for 'La ciudad de las luces muertas'. Users praise the magical realism set in postwar Barcelona featuring literary icons like Carmen Laforet. Andalusian accounts express regional pride. Writers congratulate him and note his productivity amid prior success. No negative or skeptical views observed.

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Thousands of fans queue to pay emotional tribute to Robe Iniesta's ashes at Plasencia Congress Palace, with poem recitals and performances.
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Thousands bid farewell to Robe Iniesta in Plasencia

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Thousands of Robe Iniesta fans, founder of Extremoduro, gathered on Sunday at Plasencia's Congress Palace for an emotional tribute following his death at 63. Entire families and supporters from across Spain and abroad queued for hours to leave messages and flowers by his ashes. The event featured poem recitals by Manolo Chinato and performances by his band.

Philosopher Francesc Torralba has won the 2026 Josep Pla Award with the essay 'Anatomy of Hope', opening the door to philosophy in a prize traditionally focused on narrative and memoirs. This recognition follows the 2025 edition's inclusion of neuroscience, reflecting global trends toward scientific and humanistic popularization.

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Amid Cuba's daily hardships like blackouts, lingering garbage from Hurricane Melissa, and circulating viruses, writer Carlos Esquivel Guerra from Las Tunas has won the Franz Kafka Novel Prize for his work 'I Am Leopoldo Ávila'. This news brings joy and pride in a context of ongoing challenges. Author Lien Estrada celebrates the achievement despite her own illness.

Janet Mérida 'Janis' and Erika Maldonado 'Maldo', creators of the Morras Malditas podcast, released the book Apaguemos la luz y entremos a la noche, compiling supernatural legends from Oaxaca and Sonora. The work was presented at the Guadalajara International Book Fair 2025, where they discussed their trips to document these oral stories. In an interview with MILENIO, they expressed greater fear of the living than of the dead.

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The 46th International Festival of New Latin American Cinema in Havana ended its awards ceremony with the Colombian film 'A Poet' as the big winner, securing two Coral Awards. The final weekend featured screenings of films that won Coral and Collateral awards.

Generalitat President Salvador Illa used his December 26 Christmas speech to warn about the advance of ultra-right ideas in Catalonia, Spain, and Europe, defending humanity and solidarity as essential pillars. Amid the eviction of 400 homeless people in Badalona and the growth of parties like Aliança Catalana and Vox, Illa emphasized that responses to challenges do not involve blaming the most vulnerable.

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Madrid's City Council approved the 2025 municipal budget on Monday, totaling 6,578 million euros, thanks to the PP's absolute majority, despite three total amendments from the opposition. The session, lasting over eight hours, featured heated debates on housing, infrastructure, and local conflicts. Critics decry the minimal investment in social housing amid a 55% rise in property prices since 2020.

 

 

 

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