La enferma: novela by Eduardo Zamacois

(5 User reviews)   2635
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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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.



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