You will find reading clubs everywhere, in any city – yes, in Hego Euskal Herria more easily. They are organized in closed and not so closed groups, or in larger environments that would like to have a place, to look at the optics that each contributes to the selected book and, ultimately, to dialogue with the theme that has been put on the table in the book.
There are already hundreds of them. Just take a look at the web agenda at the Word Stand to see the movement here and there by these tribes.
But it's hard to find it. The group of readers that we would like to highlight in these lines has another raw material, the comic book or the graphic novel, and as a consequence, everything else: the participants, the main theme (focusing on the novel of Sarriugarte or on an adventure of Asterix and Obelix, let us say, it is not the same), the elements to be highlighted, the criteria for speech and analysis, the motivation (learner).
This is the quote scheduled for the last Thursday of the month in Pamplona. The programming will start on February 26 with the De Rerum Natura 5 collection at Zaldiero. In March, they will talk about the work that Paco Roca has created and that Bego Montoro has translated on behalf of the editorial Astiberri: Wrinkles. In April, it will be the turn of teachers René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo, who have won the prize. On the 30th, it will be the turn of the Legionary Asterix. On May 28, they will take part in one of the most impactful comic book albums we have ever had in Basque: The worst band in the world of Portuguese José Carlos Fernandes (1998-2003), published in 2013 by the editorial Txapalarta. The latest programme, of course, will be dedicated to the Black is Beltza of Harkaitz Cano, Jorge Alderete and Fermin Muguruza.
They will always be at 8 p.m. In Katakrak, a bookstore that has raised the onomatopeya from rupture to novelty.