Sí sé por qué: Novela by Felipe Trigo
I picked up Sí sé por qué by Felipe Trigo thinking it would be one of those stuffy, slow old novels—something for critics, not for me. Boy, was I wrong. Trigo writes like he’s sitting across from you at a noisy café, telling you a story he can’t shake. It pulls you in from the first uneasy conversation, and before you know it, you’re just as conflicted as the man at its center.
The Story
Imagine a man who has played by the rules his whole life. He’s built a nice little box for himself: a decent job, a respected name in town, a wife and kids who count on him. But the walls of that box are starting to press in. Then he meets her. She’s new, electric, dangerous difference staring him right in the eye. What starts as a quiet glance between strangers catches fire. Every secret meeting is a double win—thrilling, yes, but also terrifying because he knows things could crash any second. Trigo doesn’t hand you easy judgments or a neat romance. Instead, he lets you live in this man’s messed-up choices, feeling both his hunger and his guilt as they eat him alive.
Why You Should Read It
If you’ve ever broken a personal rule or asked yourself, “Will I die wondering what if?” this book lands close to home. It reads like a diary of a breakdown. The women at the center are written with empathy backed by clear-eyed honesty—Trigo doesn’t pin them as saints or bad eggs. The most important character is silence the scary pause when someone falters between a lie and the truth. And the emotions feel wild, but they ring true. The story warns about betrayal but also nudges you to admit that love and guilt often wear the same mask. I cared about justice in this story because nobody walks clean when real passion steps in.
Final Verdict
This one is for readers who like their love stories gritty, not cute. Those who understand that choices between heart and obligation taste sour, no matter which side you swallow. If you can handle messy people—neither hero nor villain—this deserves a spot on your “closer to truth” pile. Historical fiction fans will also dig the turn-of-the-century mores from a Spanish perspective. It’s not perfect; Trigo’s voice feels stretched in places, like he wished police went easier on broke folks while readers want him to read ‘em properly. Two lumps in style for me, but the beating heart? That’s squarely brilliant.
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