Editors Reads Verdict
The grand resolution of the Cemetery of Forgotten Books series is Zafón's most ambitious work — 800 pages that finally answer the questions The Shadow of the Wind raised and do justice to both the series' gothic atmosphere and its historical seriousness. Alicia Gris is his finest protagonist.
What We Loved
- Alicia Gris is Zafón's most fully realised and compelling protagonist across all four novels
- At 816 pages, the novel has room to resolve every thread of the series with genuine satisfaction
- The full scope of the Franco period's literary and intellectual suppression is rendered with historical depth
- The resolution of mysteries established in The Shadow of the Wind is genuinely earned rather than contrived
Minor Drawbacks
- The length will challenge readers who found the earlier novels slow in their middle sections
- Requires familiarity with all three previous novels to be fully satisfying
- Some subplots are more developed than necessary given the novel's already large scale
Key Takeaways
- → The suppression of literary culture under Franco was a systematic political project, not mere incidental censorship
- → The Cemetery of Forgotten Books is ultimately a monument to the literature that political violence tried to destroy
- → Every mystery in the series is rooted in the same historical violence — the Spanish Civil War and its aftermath
- → A woman operating inside a repressive political apparatus can use that position to subvert rather than serve it
| Author | Carlos Ruiz Zafón |
|---|---|
| Publisher | HarperCollins |
| Pages | 816 |
| Published | January 1, 2016 |
| Language | English |
| Genre | Literary Fiction, Mystery, Gothic Fiction |
The Series’ Resolution
Carlos Ruiz Zafón spent sixteen years writing the four Cemetery of Forgotten Books novels, and The Labyrinth of the Spirits — at 816 pages the longest by far — is the volume that justifies the full span of that project. It opens in the late 1950s, as Franco’s Spain is beginning its slow, incomplete transition toward modernity, and it follows Alicia Gris, a young woman who works for a secret branch of the regime’s security apparatus. She is brilliant, damaged, and operating under conditions of constant danger — and when she is assigned to find a missing government minister, her investigation pulls every thread that The Shadow of the Wind, The Angel’s Game, and The Prisoner of Heaven have left hanging.
The novel is structured as a grand convergence: the separate mysteries of the earlier books, which readers have followed across three volumes and several decades of narrative time, are here revealed to be aspects of a single interconnected story rooted in the earliest days of Franco’s repression. The Cemetery of Forgotten Books — the series’ central institution, the labyrinthine library where Daniel Sempere’s story began — is finally revealed in its full historical significance.
Alicia Gris
Zafón’s finest creation in the series is its final protagonist. Alicia Gris is a woman who has survived the Spanish Civil War’s violence as a child, been shaped by it into a formidable and morally compromised instrument of the regime, and retains — under layers of professional coldness — a capacity for justice that her employers have not entirely extinguished. She is physically marked by her past (an injury that causes her constant pain), professionally exceptional in ways that both protect and endanger her, and navigating a world in which her gender is both weapon and liability.
What makes Alicia fully realised where some of Zafón’s earlier protagonists are more schematic is the novel’s attention to the specific texture of her position: the calculations she makes, the accommodations she has accepted, the line she has not yet crossed and is now being pushed toward. Her relationship with the mysteries of the Cemetery of Forgotten Books becomes personal in ways that are both surprising and, in retrospect, inevitable.
The Full Historical Canvas
The earlier novels gesture toward the Franco period’s cultural violence — the suppression of Republican intellectual life, the burning and banning of books, the systematic destruction of the generation that had built Spain’s modernist literary culture. The Labyrinth of the Spirits makes this explicit: the literary network that the novel’s mysteries involve is not merely a gothic backdrop but a historical reality, the actual community of writers, publishers, and readers that Franco’s regime worked to destroy.
At 816 pages, the novel has room that the shorter volumes lack. It can trace the suppression of a literary culture across decades, show what was lost and what survived, and do justice to both the gothic pleasures of the series and the historical seriousness that The Prisoner of Heaven introduced. The result is the Cemetery of Forgotten Books series’ fullest achievement — a novel that earns its length by using every page.
Our rating: 4.5/5 — The grand, satisfying resolution of one of contemporary fiction’s great series — 800 pages that answer every question The Shadow of the Wind raised, anchored by its finest protagonist.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is "The Labyrinth of the Spirits" about?
The fourth and final Cemetery of Forgotten Books novel follows Alicia Gris, a secret police operative in Franco's Spain, as she investigates a missing government official whose disappearance connects to a network of Barcelona's literary and intellectual life across decades — resolving the mysteries of the entire series.
What are the key takeaways from "The Labyrinth of the Spirits"?
The suppression of literary culture under Franco was a systematic political project, not mere incidental censorship The Cemetery of Forgotten Books is ultimately a monument to the literature that political violence tried to destroy Every mystery in the series is rooted in the same historical violence — the Spanish Civil War and its aftermath A woman operating inside a repressive political apparatus can use that position to subvert rather than serve it
Is "The Labyrinth of the Spirits" worth reading?
The grand resolution of the Cemetery of Forgotten Books series is Zafón's most ambitious work — 800 pages that finally answer the questions The Shadow of the Wind raised and do justice to both the series' gothic atmosphere and its historical seriousness. Alicia Gris is his finest protagonist.
Ready to Read The Labyrinth of the Spirits?
Check the current price on Amazon.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)Prices and availability are subject to change. See Amazon for current price.
Review last updated: