Fortuna by Enrique Pérez Escrich

(8 User reviews)   1965
By Helena Scott Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Rural Life
Pérez Escrich, Enrique, 1829-1897 Pérez Escrich, Enrique, 1829-1897
Spanish
Hey, I just finished this old Spanish novel called 'Fortuna' and it's way more interesting than I expected. Forget dry history—this is a full-blown family drama set in the 19th century, and it's all about money, secrets, and the messy scramble for status. The story follows a wealthy family whose fortune comes crashing down, forcing everyone to reveal their true colors. Who's loyal? Who's just hanging around for the cash? And what happens when the safety net is ripped away? It's like watching a telenovela set in drawing rooms and counting houses, with characters making terrible, human decisions. If you like stories where personal ambition smashes into family duty, you'll get hooked. It's surprisingly modern in its questions about what we owe each other.
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Let's set the scene: Spain in the 1800s. Society is all about who you know and how much you have. 'Fortuna' throws us into the middle of a wealthy family who seems to have it all—until they don't. The head of the family has built an empire, but when financial disaster strikes, the shiny facade cracks wide open.

The Story

The plot follows the family's sudden fall from grace. Debts pile up, social standing crumbles, and every relative and hanger-on starts panicking. We see sons and daughters who were raised in luxury now facing a world they're not prepared for. Friendships are tested, romantic engagements are put under the microscope, and long-buried secrets about how the money was really made begin to surface. It's a chain reaction of consequences, showing how one man's financial collapse isn't just a business failure—it's an earthquake that shakes every relationship in his life.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was how familiar these characters felt, even though they're in fancy 19th-century clothes. The spoiled son who's never worked a day, the daughter whose marriage prospects vanish with the bank balance, the so-called friends who disappear—it's all about human nature under pressure. Pérez Escrich doesn't just give us villains and heroes; he gives us flawed people reacting to crisis. The book asks big questions that still matter: Is our love for family conditional on their success? How much of our identity is tied to money and social position? It's a sharp, sometimes funny, often sad look at the things we value.

Final Verdict

This is a great pick if you enjoy character-driven historical fiction. You don't need to be a scholar of Spanish history; the drama is universal. It's for anyone who likes seeing a gilded world turned upside down, or stories about resilience and starting over. If you've ever wondered how people rebuild their lives after losing everything, 'Fortuna' offers a fascinating, human answer from the past. A solid, engaging read that proves some struggles are timeless.

William Garcia
1 year ago

Surprisingly enough, the flow of the text seems very fluid. Exactly what I needed.

Deborah Torres
1 year ago

This is one of those stories where the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. I couldn't put it down.

Logan Williams
4 months ago

Solid story.

5
5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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