7 de julio by Benito Pérez Galdós
Benito Pérez Galdós is often called Spain’s Dickens, but in 7 de Julio, he feels more like a sharp-eyed journalist with a novelist’s heart. The book is part of his massive Episodios Nacionales series, but you can absolutely jump in here. It stands powerfully on its own.
The Story
The date is July 7, 1854. A liberal military revolt against the government has just been crushed in the streets of Madrid. The book doesn’t show us the battle itself. Instead, it starts in the quiet, uneasy morning after. We follow a handful of characters—like the idealistic journalist Santiago Ibero and the more cautious gentleman Jenara—as they navigate a city holding its breath. The ‘victory’ is hollow. Friendships are tested, political ideals are scrambled, and everyone is trying to figure out what comes next in a country that seems stuck in a cycle of hope and disappointment. The plot moves through conversations, chance encounters, and small personal decisions that feel huge, building a picture of a society at a crossroads.
Why You Should Read It
What grabbed me was how modern it feels. Galdós isn’t interested in heroes and villains. He’s interested in the people in the middle—the ones who have to go to work the next day, who have to face their neighbors, and who have to reconcile their dreams with a complicated reality. The political tension isn’t in speeches; it’s in a glance across a dinner table or a choice to walk down a certain street. You get a real sense of how history isn’t just made by leaders, but by the collective mood of everyday citizens. Santiago’s passionate frustration and Jenara’s weary pragmatism create a compelling dialogue that still echoes today.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect book for anyone who thinks historical fiction can be slow or stuffy. 7 de Julio is a political and psychological snapshot that moves with urgency. It’s for readers who love deep character studies and seeing big historical moments through intimate, personal lenses. If you enjoyed the human-scale drama of Hilary Mantel’s work or the social detail of a great 19th-century novel but want something tighter and more immediate, Galdós will be a brilliant discovery. A gripping, thoughtful read about what happens after the shouting stops.
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Brian Lopez
1 year agoThis book was worth my time since it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. Worth every second.
Oliver Flores
1 year agoBased on the summary, I decided to read it and the emotional weight of the story is balanced perfectly. Thanks for sharing this review.