La enferma: novela by Eduardo Zamacois

(23 User reviews)   6613
By Brenda Hill Posted on Jan 13, 2026
In Category - Medical Thrillers
Zamacois, Eduardo, 1873-1971 Zamacois, Eduardo, 1873-1971
Spanish
Okay, I just finished a book that's been sitting on my shelf forever, and wow—I have to tell you about it. It's called 'La enferma' by Eduardo Zamacois. Forget everything you think you know about old novels being stuffy. This one is like a slow-burn psychological thriller set in late 19th-century Spain. The whole story hangs on a single, maddening question: Is the beautiful, wealthy young woman at its center genuinely, mysteriously ill, or is she a master manipulator playing a dangerous game with everyone around her? Her doctor is obsessed, her family is desperate, and her fiancé is caught in the middle. Zamacois doesn't give you easy answers. Instead, he pulls you into this claustrophobic world of a grand house where suspicion is the real sickness. You'll find yourself constantly switching sides, wondering who to believe. It's less about the medicine and more about the mind games. If you like stories where the biggest mystery is human nature itself, and you don't mind a narrative that simmers with tension until the very last page, you need to pick this up. It’s surprisingly modern in its feel.
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NOCHEBUENA.--EL PASADO VUELVE.--FRÍO.--LOS REYES PASAN.--PRESENTIMIENTO. VIAJES LA ALEGRÍA DE ANDAR (_Crónicas de un viaje por tierras de Puerto Rico y Cuba, Centro-América y América del Sur_).--DE CÓRDOBA A ALCAZARQUIVIR. CRITICA IMPRESIONES DE ARTE.--DESDE MI BUTACA (_Apuntes para una psicología del teatro_).--EL TEATRO POR DENTRO. CUENTOS La Risa, la Carne y la Muerte. EN PREPARACION EL DELITO DE TODOS (_novela_). EDUARDO ZAMACOIS OBRAS COMPLETAS LA ENFERMA NOVELA UNICA EDICIÓN REFUNDIDA POR EL AUTOR [Illustration: colofón: RENACIMIENTO] COMPAÑÍA IBERO-AMERICANA DE PUBLICACIONES (S. A.) RENACIMIENTO Puerta del Sol, 15 Ronda Universidad, 1 Florida, 251 MADRID BARCELONA BUENOS AIRES Compañía General de Artes Gráficas (S. A.)-Madrid ADVERTENCIA Este libro, publicado en 1896, es mi primera novela: afortunadamente, la prensa apenas habló de ella, la edición fué corta y mi esfuerzo pasó inadvertido. Aunque ogaño la presento muy corregida, el lector sorprenderá en sus páginas candores y balbuceos de principiante, descripciones borrosas, retratos que mi mano bisoña no supo dejar rotunda y gallardamente concluídos, momentos psicológicos que el temor de parecer machacón y difuso, dejó mal alumbrados. Conste así en desagravio de la labor que luego he hecho. E. Z. Madrid, Junio 1903. I Consuelito Mendoza despertó presa de un ligero acceso de fiebre: toda la noche estuvo viendo danzar ante ella varios personajes cubiertos de sangre y con heridas horribles por las cuales asomaban entrañas palpitantes. Las primeras claridades matutinas causáronla inmenso bien, al ahuyentar aquel mundo fantástico y rojo; mas la penosa impresión de la pesadilla y la falta de reposo, la dejaron rendida. Aún permaneció largo rato echada, sin atreverse a mover pie ni mano, bostezando nerviosamente, tiritando a pesar de la agradable temperatura de la habitación y sintiendo en sus oídos un raro y sostenido murmujeo. Estaba silenciosa, acurrucada en un ángulo de su gran cama matrimonial, paseando miradas indiferentes de un sitio a otro: primero sus ojos repararon en el abrigo de pieles que había dejado la víspera sobre una silla. ¡Pícara camarera, no acordarse de llevarlo a su sitio!... Aplicóse a examinarlo fijamente, por hacer algo y distraerse, batallando por buscarle semejanza con otro objeto, pero sin conseguirlo; siempre le parecía lo que era: un abrigo de pieles. Mas luego la endiablada imaginación empezó a triunfar de los sentidos, y lo que los ojos no pudieron ver lo vió el alma descomponiendo la realidad a través de los misteriosos cristales imaginativos: una arruga se la antojó un sombrero de copa antiguo, ancho de arriba y estrecho de abajo: aquello ya era algo, pero no todo: el sombrero, sí, era perfecto; mas, ¿dónde estaba la cabeza? Continuó mirando... y, nada; la realidad se obstinaba en no doblegarse al capricho. --Pues yo he de conseguirlo--murmuró la joven esbozando un mohín picaresco. Frunció los ojos y miró con uno de ellos a través de su mano derecha medio cerrada a guisa de telescopio: así quedóse inmóvil, embelesada, observando siempre: la autosugestión continuó y pronto la visión rebuscada surgió de golpe, con claridad indudable. Bajo el gran sombrero de copa, negro y peludo, había una cara redonda, mofletuda y riente; aquel rostro tenía un ojo hinchado y la nariz torcida; una nariz ciranesca, insolente y sensual. Consuelo se echó a reír recordando a Gelasio, el cochero de una amiga suya, cuando iba en el pescante bajo su pelerina de pieles, con el sombrero encajado hasta las orejas y los carrillos amoratados por el frío. Siguió mirando y la imagen tornó a descomponerse: el sombrero de copa se prolongaba convirtiéndose en hocico; la cara, formada por un trozo de piel blanca, parecía el terrible pechazo de un animal, las patas se bosquejaron en la...

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I picked up Eduardo Zamacois's La enferma (The Sick Woman) expecting a period piece, but what I found was a tense, character-driven puzzle that refused to let me go. Published in 1895, it feels far more contemporary in its concerns than its publication date suggests.

The Story

The plot revolves around Blanca, a young woman from a well-off family who suffers from a strange, debilitating illness that no doctor can diagnose. Her life is confined to her room, and her world consists of her devoted but weary family and her frustrated fiancé, Ricardo. Enter Dr. Rojas, a brilliant and ambitious physician determined to crack the case. As he spends more time with Blanca, he becomes entangled in her world. He sees flashes of strength and willpower that don't match the image of the helpless invalid. The central conflict isn't a physical battle against disease, but a psychological duel. Is Blanca's illness a tragic physical reality, or is it an elaborate, possibly unconscious, performance—a way to control her environment and the people in it? The uncertainty infects everyone in the house, turning care into suspicion and love into doubt.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me wasn't the medical mystery, but the human one. Zamacois is brilliant at building atmosphere. The house feels like a gilded cage, and the tension comes from the quiet moments—a glance held too long, a sigh that seems practiced. You're never quite sure if Blanca is the ultimate victim or a cunning puppeteer. This ambiguity makes her fascinating. It also forces you to question how we perceive illness, especially in women, and how easily care can become a form of control. The doctor's own obsession is a story in itself. Is he a healer, or just another man trying to solve and possess the enigmatic woman in front of him? It's a short book, but it packs a lot of uncomfortable questions.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for readers who love classic literature but crave psychological depth and moral ambiguity. If you enjoyed the tense, confined feel of novels like The Turn of the Screw or the complex character studies of later writers, you'll find a lot to love here. It's not a fast-paced adventure; it's a slow, careful excavation of truth and deception. I'd recommend it to anyone interested in the history of medicine, gender roles, or stories that trust the reader to sit with uncertainty. Just be prepared to have your own diagnosis of Blanca change chapter by chapter.



📜 Public Domain Content

This historical work is free of copyright protections. Thank you for supporting open literature.

Edward Thompson
1 year ago

Solid story.

Michael Anderson
1 month ago

Loved it.

William Rodriguez
1 year ago

This is one of those stories where the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. One of the best books I've read this year.

Susan Taylor
6 months ago

This book was worth my time since the storytelling feels authentic and emotionally grounded. I couldn't put it down.

James Scott
8 months ago

I didn't expect much, but the atmosphere created is totally immersive. Don't hesitate to start reading.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (23 User reviews )

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