| Author/Contributor(s): | Martín Moreno, Francisco |
| Publisher: | Alfaguara |
| Date: | 3/24/2026 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
Francisco Martín Moreno incursiona con su prosa, tan intensa como reveladora, en el siglo XIX, para arrancarle secretos celosamente guardados a través de una novela impetuosa en la que el amor es también protagonista.
ENGLISH DESCRIPTION
The role of the Catholic clergy in the tragic and painful history of nineteenth-century Mexico offers many clues to the country’s modern-day reality. The Church hierarchy controlled Mexico’s wealth for more than three centuries and colluded with the military to oust inconvenient leaders such as Benito Juárez and install ones more favorable to their interests, including the emperors Iturbide and Maximilian. The Catholic status quo rejected the ideals of the French Revolution, violently resisted progress, and used the pulpit and confessional to serve its wealthy landowning patrons. As if that weren’t enough, it hindered literacy efforts and tried to restrict education to the privileged classes, blocked imports of objectionable books, and practiced censorship, kidnapping and torture. As an institution, it exploited Mexican society, excommunicated supporters of the liberal 1857 Constitution, and forcefully defended its privileges, which included control over fifty percent of the country’s real estate, mortgage lenders, the secret police and a network of clandestine prisons. The Church benefited from tithes and tax exemptions, using them to fund conflicts such as the War of Reform and encouraging the faithful to kill liberals with impunity.
Francisco Martín Moreno exposes these and other closely guarded secrets of Mexico’s tumultuous nineteenth century in this fascinating novel, a testament to the power of love