Prisoner of Heaven

By (author)Carlos Zafon

$10.00$12.00

After the shadow of the wind and the angel game, I ended my strange meeting with Carlos Zafon in the third part of the Tomb of Forgotten Books series in this piece that I read while trying to understand what was going on in his head, which wanted the prisoner of heaven to tell us the dark nights of Barcelona from the window of its prisons, that prison that embraced Martin for a long time and through which he excelled in writing The Game of the Angel, which was the hero of that novel David Martin and Isabella, and we got to know their end, which was not confirmed by the lines. The writer also explains that what we can consider a coincidence with us may be wisely studied and what we interact with with all honesty may be fake and obsolete as the first boot, the past is just images stuck in our heads and just a glance of it returns to expose itself, and opens new cracks in our hearts, pushing you to search and explore what the truth is and to what extent it can comfort you or in any proportion that may make you a wreckage between the legs, yet the search for it is The way of salvation,

The novel Prisoner of Heaven written by Carlos Zafon Perhaps the reader who is lost in “The Shadow of the Wind” and lost in “The Angel’s Game” will be surprised to enter the cell of the “Prisoner of Heaven”. However, he will learn early on about Carlos Zafón’s touch and his ingenuity in adapting various narrative techniques to his vision. If Zafón portrays Barcelona between the nostalgic shadow romance and the tangled whirlpools of the game, he is in this third stop, taking us to the inner realms of prison to describe the underground Barshauna, a Barcelona emerging from the phobia of war, and looking for beauty. In this episode, the reader will discover that in a continuous return to the previous two episodes, no less fun, exciting and interesting, to find solutions to the most mysterious and obscure points. He will reunite with characters he thought were secondary, and he will realize that nothing happens by accident. Even if Zafon answered the questions, he shuffled the cards again, paving the way for his readers a new slide into the corridors of the “Labyrinth of Spirits”, the last stop of the epic “Cemetery of Forgotten Books”

Customer Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Prisoner of Heaven”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like…

  • One Hundred Years of Solitude

    One Hundred Years of Solitude is a 1967 novel by Colombian author Gabriel García Márquez that tells the multi-generational story of the Buendía family, whose patriarch, José Arcadio Buendía, founded the fictitious town of Macondo. The novel is often cited as one of the supreme achievements in world literature.

    $17.00$25.00
  • For Bread Alone

    For Bread Alone , al-Khubz al-Hafi) is a controversial autobiographical work by Mohammed Choukri. It was written in Arabic in 1972 and translated into English by Paul Bowles in 1973.[1] In 1980, it was published in French as Le Pain Nu in a translation by Tahar Ben Jelloun. The novel has been translated into 39 foreign languages[2] and adapted into a French graphic novel by Abdelaziz Mouride [fr].[3]

    $7.00$10.00
  • The Da Vinci Code

    The Da Vinci Code is a 2003 mystery thriller novel by Dan Brown. It is Brown’s second novel to include the character Robert Langdon: the first was his 2000 novel Angels & Demons. The Da Vinci Code follows symbologist Langdon and cryptologist Sophie Neveu after a murder in the Louvre Museum in Paris entangles them in a dispute between the Priory of Sion and Opus Dei over the possibility of Jesus and Mary Magdalene having had a child together.

    $12.00$15.00
  • Sophie’s World

    is a 1991 novel by Norwegian writer Jostein Gaarder. It follows Sophie Amundsen, a Norwegian teenager, who is introduced to the history of philosophy as she is asked “Who are you?” in a letter from an unknown philosopher.[1] The nonfictional content of the book aligns with Bertrand Russell’s A History of Western Philosophy.[2]

    $22.00$25.00