Fire or Flood? That Is Not the Question

Wildfires, floods, and the urgency of a new democratic and community-based model to confront environmental catastrophes.   By M.ª Pilar Rueda Requena Hoylunes – We watch in dismay as several weeks of intense, uncontrolled wildfires devastate our country, especially in the northeast. Yet this is not a new release: the scene repeats itself every summer with greater intensity and frequency.…

Read More

Heat Cannot Be Fought with Water Alone

A summer conversation about warnings, solutions, and the urgency of adapting to a hotter future.   By Any Altamirano HoyLunes.– The afternoon was falling over the city under an unforgiving sun. On the terraces, fans barely managed to stir the heavy air. Meanwhile, official thermometers hovered around *“40 degrees in Valencia,”* and in other parts of the Valencian Community and…

Read More

Farewell to Verónica Echegui

The Madrid-born actress passes away at the age of 42, leaving behind a legacy of talent, authenticity, and passion that defined a generation of Spanish cinema.   By Jorge Alonso Curiel HoyLunes – Spain is in shock over the unexpected passing this past Sunday, August 24, in her hometown, of actress Verónica Echegui (Madrid, 1983–2025), at only 42 years old,…

Read More

What Gastronomy Leaves Within: The Gaze of a Chef Who Writes

“Gastronomy as a narrative: a language made of flavors, memories, and affections” “From the stove to the written word: when flavor becomes written memory”   By Ingrid Julve HoyLunes – Everyone talks about gastronomy. Lists, rankings, routes are written. Dishes are photographed as if they were trophies. But when the kitchen is looked at closely, it dismantles itself like a…

Read More

Wardrobe Treasure: Rescuing Wonderful Films with “Make Way for Tomorrow” by Leo McCarey

Make Way for Tomorrow: a forgotten classic that illuminates with tenderness and lucidity the drama of old age.   By Jorge Alonso Curiel HoyLunes – It is always necessary to rescue from the back of the cinematic wardrobe—though also from the wardrobe of every art—works full of value, great films somewhat forgotten, or completely forgotten, that have contributed to cinema…

Read More

It Reads Like a Movie

When narrative turns into cinema: Frederick Forsyth and the art of writing movies that are read.   By Edinson Martínez HoyLunes – The notes that have finally conquered these pages are the result of repeated attempts to focus ideas on content constantly interrupted by the astonishment of coincidences. Having just finished reading “The Afghan” and, contrary to my habit, I…

Read More

The Drug that Promises to Slow Forgetting

An experimental antibody therapy offers the possibility of slowing the advance of Alzheimer’s, while thousands of families in Spain live daily with the disease that erases memories and consumes identities.   By Ehab Soltan HoyLunes – “My mother looks at me, smiles, but she doesn’t always know who I am”, says Laura, 48, as she adjusts a blanket over her…

Read More
Esta web utiliza cookies propias y de terceros para su correcto funcionamiento y para fines analíticos. Contiene enlaces a sitios web de terceros con políticas de privacidad ajenas que podrás aceptar o no cuando accedas a ellos. Al hacer clic en el botón Aceptar, acepta el uso de estas tecnologías y el procesamiento de tus datos para estos propósitos. Más información
Privacidad