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  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2728.jpg
  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2717.jpg
  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2702.jpg
  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2668.jpg
  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2661.jpg
  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2655.jpg
  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2651.jpg
  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2648.jpg
  • Laura and Jeff , and the english couple, Gill and Andrew, at the end of the afternoon  swim on the pool, the only place in the park that is forbidden clothes.
    _G2Y2693.jpg
  • The first naturist park in Portugal was the Quinta das Oliveiras Park in oliveira do Hospital near the mountains created by a dutch Siets Bijker.
    _G2Y1985.jpg
  • Meco Beach, one of the oficial naturist beaches in Portugal.
    _G2Y2766.jpg
  • Meco Beach, one of the oficial naturist beaches in Portugal.
    _G2Y2762.jpg
  • Meco Beach, one of the oficial naturist beaches in Portugal.
    _G2Y2749.jpg
  • Meco Beach, one of the oficial naturist beaches in Portugal.
    _G2Y2754.jpg
  • Meco Beach, one of the oficial naturist beaches in Portugal.
    _G2Y2739.jpg
  • Meco Beach, one of the oficial naturist beaches in Portugal.
    _G2Y2737.jpg
  • Laura's task is to keep clean and in order the bar of the naturist camping park.
    _G2Y2631.jpg
  • Laura's task is to keep clean and in order the bar of the naturist camping park.
    _G2Y2619.jpg
  • Portuguese Naturist Federation  members share a meal.
    _G2Y2613.jpg
  • Portuguese Naturist Federation  members share a meal.
    _G2Y2605.jpg
  • Jeff feeds some of the camping park's animals is a daily task.
    _G2Y2600.jpg
  • Dutch couple that stay living for about two years on the naturist camping park, Hannah e "Popeye".
    _G2Y2596.jpg
  • Jeff walks by the park's area.
    _G2Y2585.jpg
  • Dutch couple that stay living for about two years on the naturist camping park, Hannah e "Popeye".
    _G2Y2588.jpg
  • The two owners of the naturist camping park, Laura and Jeff, two dutchs.
    _G2Y2565.jpg
  • The two owners of the naturist camping park, Laura and Jeff, two dutchs.
    _G2Y2562.jpg
  • The two owners of the naturist camping park, Laura and Jeff, two dutchs.
    _G2Y2560.jpg
  • Jeff, Lauras's husband in one of the houses of the Naturist Camping Park, Monte Barão.
    _G2Y2556.jpg
  • Laura one of the camping park owners  and her dog.
    _G2Y2553.jpg
  • Monte Barão Nuturism Camping Park in the Alentejo coast, Santiago do Cacém.
    _G2Y2533.jpg
  • Monte Barão Nuturism Camping Park in the Alentejo coast, Santiago do Cacém.
    _G2Y2529.jpg
  • Monte Barão Nuturism Camping Park in the Alentejo coast, Santiago do Cacém.
    _G2Y2526.jpg
  • Monte Barão Nuturism Camping Park in the Alentejo coast, Santiago do Cacém.
    _G2Y2508.jpg
  • Portuguese Naturism Federation members, Nuno Frade; Paula Costa and Alexandre Moleiro at the monte Barão Camping Park.
    _G2Y2496.jpg
  • Portuguese Naturism Federation members, Nuno Frade; Paula Costa and Alexandre Moleiro at the monte Barão Camping Park.
    _G2Y2488.jpg
  • The first naturist park in Portugal was the Quinta das Oliveiras Park in oliveira do Hospital near the mountains created by a dutch Siets Bijker.
    _G2Y1994.jpg
  • The first naturist park in Portugal was the Quinta das Oliveiras Park in oliveira do Hospital near the mountains created by a dutch Siets Bijker.
    _G2Y1990.jpg
  • The first naturist park in Portugal was the Quinta das Oliveiras Park in oliveira do Hospital near the mountains created by a dutch Siets Bijker.
    _G2Y1980.jpg
  • Monte Barão Nuturism Camping Park in the Alentejo coast, Santiago do Cacém.
    _G2Y2540.jpg
  • Monte Barão Nuturism Camping Park in the Alentejo coast, Santiago do Cacém.
    _G2Y2532.jpg
  • The first naturist park in Portugal was the Quinta das Oliveiras Park in oliveira do Hospital near the mountains created by a dutch Siets Bijker.
    _G2Y1987.jpg
  • A younger student climbs the bars on the classroom window as class is being conducted inside at the Escuela Republica del Mexico.  Children ask questions in english class at a school in Guaimaca, Honduras.  Over 94% of Honduran children are enrolled in school, yet only 40% actually complete their schooling.  Hounduras is considered the third poorest country in the Western Hemisphere (Haiti, Nicaragua). With over 50% of the population living below the poverty line and 28% unemployed, Hondurans frequently turn to illegal immigration as a solution to their desperate situation. The Department of Homeland Security has noted an 95% increase in illegal immigrants coming from Honduras between 2000 and 2009, the largest increase of any country.
    h_00012428.jpg
  • José Almeida worked as a part time worker for Unicenter, a company that organize informatic and english courses for seconday school students. The company instead made a contract to him imposed the green receipt (recibo verde)regimen. He was doing telemarketing to convince clients to attend to the courses. Today he quit the job and he denounce the company to the national date protection commision and he is suiting the company at the labour court.
    h_00012258.jpg
  • José Almeida worked as a part time worker for Unicenter, a company that organize informatic and english courses for seconday school students. The company instead made a contract to him imposed the green receipt (recibo verde)regimen. He was doing telemarketing to convince clients to attend to the courses. Today he quit the job and he denounce the company to the national date protection commision and he is suiting the company at the labour court.
    h_00012257.jpg
  • José Almeida worked as a part time worker for Unicenter, a company that organize informatic and english courses for seconday school students. The company instead made a contract to him imposed the green receipt (recibo verde)regimen. He was doing telemarketing to convince clients to attend to the courses. Today he quit the job and he denounce the company to the national date protection commision and he is suiting the company at the labour court.
    h_00012254.jpg
  • José Almeida worked  in part time  for Unicenter, a company that organizes informatic and english courses for secundary  High schools. This  company did not make any contract  and instead imposed him the green invoices ("recibos verdes") regiment. He was doing telemarketing to convince clients to attend  the courses. Today he quit the job and denounced the company to the national data protection commission and sued the company in the labour court.
    h_00012256.jpg
  • José Almeida worked as a part time worker for Unicenter, a company that organize informatic and english courses for seconday school students. The company instead made a contract to him imposed the green receipt (recibo verde)regimen. He was doing telemarketing to convince clients to attend to the courses. Today he quit the job and he denounce the company to the national date protection commision and he is suiting the company at the labour court.
    h_00012255.jpg
  • José Almeida worked  in part time  for Unicenter, a company that organizes informatic and english courses for secundary  High schools. This  company did not make any contract  and instead imposed him the green invoices ("recibos verdes") regiment. He was doing telemarketing to convince clients to attend  the courses. Today he quit the job and denounced the company to the national data protection commission and sued the company in the labour court.
    h_00012253.jpg
  • José Almeida worked as a part time worker for Unicenter, a company that organize informatic and english courses for seconday school students. The company instead made a contract to him imposed the green receipt (recibo verde)regimen. He was doing telemarketing to convince clients to attend to the courses. Today he quit the job and he denounce the company to the national date protection commision and he is suiting the company at the labour court.
    h_00012259.jpg
  • Wheat near Casasana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015772.jpg
  • Budia. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015770.jpg
  • Old woman in Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015769.jpg
  • Landscape. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015768.jpg
  • Entrepenas reservoir. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015767.jpg
  • Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015766.jpg
  • Budia. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015764.jpg
  • Pareja. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015759.jpg
  • Colegiata church in Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015757.jpg
  • Casasana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015755.jpg
  • Brihuega. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015752.jpg
  • Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015749.jpg
  • Francisco Ranera, poet, in Casa Seco bar in Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015747.jpg
  • Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015745.jpg
  • Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015744.jpg
  • Paris church in La Puerta. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015743.jpg
  • Corcoles. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015740.jpg
  • Trillo. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015737.jpg
  • Brihuega. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015735.jpg
  • Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015732.jpg
  • Man in La Puerta. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015731.jpg
  • Tetas de Viana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015729.jpg
  • Bar. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015728.jpg
  • Vegetable garden in Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015774.jpg
  • Sacedon. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015773.jpg
  • Image in Santiago church. Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015771.jpg
  • Taracena. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015765.jpg
  • Ecce Homo from 1674 by Pedro de Mena. San Pedro church in Budia. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015763.jpg
  • Budia. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015762.jpg
  • Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015761.jpg
  • Tajuna river. Brihuega. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015760.jpg
  • Casasana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015758.jpg
  • Brihuega. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015756.jpg
  • Santiago church. Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015754.jpg
  • Duron. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015753.jpg
  • Hostel in Sacedon. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015750.jpg
  • Torija castle. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015751.jpg
  • Shepherd in Casasana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015748.jpg
  • Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015746.jpg
  • Old Parador in Torija. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015742.jpg
  • Moranchel. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015741.jpg
  • Wine cellar in Gargoles de Abajo. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015739.jpg
  • Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015738.jpg
  • Paris church in La Puerta. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015736.jpg
  • Hostel in La Puerta. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015734.jpg
  • Trillo. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015733.jpg
  • Tajo river in Trillo. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015730.jpg
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