September 9, 2016
“East of Malaga – Your guide to the Axarquia and Costa Tropical is full of useful information and thoughtful advice. It contains everything you need to know about fiestas, sights, wine and food, places to stay and much more.” — The Mail on Sunday
Until recently there was no decent guide in English to the sub-tropical area to the east of Málaga. But that’s all changed thanks to a totally updated guide published by Maroma Press.
Here is all the info you need to find delightful small hotels and good-quality restaurants as well as facilities for all manner of outdoor activities, from mountain biking to hiking, scuba-diving to canyoning. Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | Frigiliana, Laurie Lee, Mediterranean, Spain, tourism guide, Uncategorized | Tagged: Almuñecar, Andalusia, Axarquía, beaches, Contraviesa, Costa del Sol, David Baird, Granada, holiday in Spain, Laurie Lee, Lecrín valley, Maroma Press, Málaga, Mediterranean, Nerja, Salobreña, Spain, Spanish sierras | Permalink
Posted by maromapress
June 11, 2016
Sunny Side Up is David Baird’s ironic look at rural life, reflecting the dramatic changes in southern Spain since he went to live there more than 30 years ago. And now it’s part of a school curriculum — making it required reading in Spanish schools.
“This is a bit daunting,” admitted David, a journalist and author long based in the Axarquía (the eastern corner of Málaga province), when he heard that Sunny Side Up Up — The 21st century hits a Spanish village had been selected as a set book for Fifth Grade students at the Escuela Oficial de Idiomas in Motril, Granada province.
“I have to give presentations to the students and I’m used to asking questions rather than answering them.
“Fielding questions from a bunch of critical students is a different game — especially for somebody who until recently had never made a public speech in his life!”
Hilarious, nostalgic and moving, his book inspired the Sunday Times to comment: “Recommended reading for anybody who ever wondered what happened to the ‘real Spain’.”
After working around the world as a journalist, David has been based for some years in Spain, reporting for international publications on everything from earthquakes to wine festivals.
Sunny Side Up is published by Maroma Press (www.maromapress.wordpress.com) and is available from English-language bookshops in Spain or from Amazon.
3 Comments | Franco, guerrillas, maquis, Mediterranean, nostalgia, rural life, Spain, Spanish Civil War, Uncategorized | Permalink
Posted by maromapress
January 30, 2016
Lonely Planet, the leading guide book on Spain, has heaped praise on the Maroma Press publication Between Two Fires — Guerrilla war in the Spanish sierras.
It comments: “A few communists and republicans continued their struggle after the Civil War in small guerrilla units in Andalucia’s mountains. David Baird’s book Between Two Fires fascinatingly documents the struggle between the guerrillas and the Guardia Civil around the village of Frigiliana in the 1940s and ’50s.”.
The fruit of years of investigation, Between Two Fires is the only book in English that relates what happened AFTER Spain’s Civil War, when rural communities were torn apart as rebels fought to undermine the Franco dictatorship.
To research what happened in those years when tight censorship sealed off Spain from the rest of the world author Baird interviewed former guerrillas, Civil Guards, villagers and their families.
He checked official files all over Spain and as far apart as London and Washington to find out just what happened in a war that went virtually unreported.
In the process he uncovered details about a brutal crime that was covered up for more than 50 years and about the clandestine training of Spanish guerrillas by members of the American secret service.
Between Two Fires is on sale at English bookshops in Spain and from Amazon and other online outlets.
Leave a Comment » | Andalusia, Civil War, Franco, Frigiliana, Granada, guerrillas, maquis, Málaga, Mediterranean, sierra war, Spain, Spanish Civil War, Uncategorized | Tagged: Andalusia, Axarquía, Between Two Fires, Costa del Sol, David Baird, Entre dos fuegos, Franco, guerrilla war, maquis, Málaga, Nerja, pueblo, Spain | Permalink
Posted by maromapress
October 31, 2015
ANY DAY NOW the first snows will blanket the summit of one of southern Spain’s highest mountains — just a short distance from the Mediterranean beaches where (hardier) folk swim all year around.
La Maroma, soaring 2,068 metres, is the highest peak in Málaga province — and probably the closest thing to a holy mountain in these parts.
In the days before refrigeration the neveros (literally, “snowmen”) would trek to the top of Maroma to seek snow and ice. This they would pack hard in straw and load it in esparto baskets on the backs of mules. Transported to the coast, the ice was used to cool drinks or make ice-cream. Read the rest of this entry »
1 Comment | Uncategorized | Tagged: Andalusia, Axarquía, Between Two Fires, Civil War, Costa del Sol, Entre dos fuegos, España, guerrilla, holy mountain, ice house, Maroma, Málaga, sierra, war | Permalink
Posted by maromapress
June 23, 2015
Picking the right title can make all the difference when your book goes on sale. But how do you find it? The possibilities are endless, as David Baird discovered.
What do these phrases have in common?
Sunstruck, Fiesta fever, Follow that mule!, Whitewash and olives, The vintage years, Is there a Spaniard in the pueblo?, Everything under the sun, The blossoms of spring, The sunshine life, The donkey that roared…
Answer: they are all suggested titles for a new book. Read the rest of this entry »
1 Comment | Uncategorized | Tagged: Andalusia, Costa del Sol, escapist, España negra, fiesta, humour, pueblo, simple life, Spain, sunny side, vino, vintage | Permalink
Posted by maromapress
February 14, 2015
WE’RE ALL ESCAPISTS AT HEART, dreaming of another life in another place without the nagging worries that go with our daily routine.
However, if you take the big step and launch yourself into a new life, a “simple life” in a totally different environment, it can turn out rather more complicated than you expected.
In the case of one not-so-innocent Britisher, his escapist dream turn turns into a dramatic adventure with sinister surprises lying in wait.
Don’t Miss The Fiesta!, a thriller set in a Spanish village, takes the lid off the surprises that could await a stranger in an outwardly tranquil Andalusian pueblo. Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | escapist, Franco, guerrillas, Mediterranean, rural life, Spain, Spanish Civil War | Tagged: Andalusia, Blood Wedding, Civil War, escapist, España negra, fiesta, Franco, Granada, guerrilla war, maquis, pueblo, Semana Santa, sierras, simple life, Spain, Spanish village, thriller | Permalink
Posted by maromapress
January 22, 2015
For more than 50 years residents of Spain’s Granada province have known where to go for the finest fresh trout. They have flocked to the restaurants of Riofrío, a hamlet on the main highway between Granada and Málaga, to eat trout nurtured by a fish farm.
Trade is still brisk, but — unbeknown to most visitors — just a few metres away from the trout tanks a whole new industry has been created. While not abandoning the trout, the Piscifactoría de Sierra Nevada has invested in a big way in producing top-quality caviar. Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | Uncategorized | Tagged: Acipenser naccarii, Caspian Sea, caviar, fish eggs, gourmet, Granada, piscifactoria, Sierra Nevada, Spanish caviar, sturgeon, trout | Permalink
Posted by maromapress