

Arturo Pérez-Reverte forged a literary career from the raw material of his two decades as a war correspondent. He covered conflicts in Bosnia, Lebanon, and the Falklands for Spanish television and print before publishing his first novel, *The Hussar*, in 1986. His 1990 breakthrough, *The Flanders Panel*, established his signature blend of intellectual puzzle, historical erudition, and taut thriller mechanics. He achieved global fame with the Captain Alatriste series, beginning in 1996, which revived the Spanish Golden Age for modern readers. Pérez-Reverte is frequently mislabeled a mere genre writer; his books are dense interrogations of history, art, and violence. He was elected to the Royal Spanish Academy in 2003. His work provides a sustained critique of romanticized national pasts, arguing that the patterns of greed and courage are immutable. His novels remain essential texts for understanding Spain's complex relationship with its own history.
1946–1964
The largest generation in history at the time. Shaped by postwar prosperity, the Vietnam War, the sexual revolution, and Watergate. They questioned every institution their parents built — then ran them.
Arturo was born in 1951, placing them squarely in the Baby Boomers. The events that shaped this generation — postwar prosperity, civil rights, Vietnam, and the counterculture — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1951
#1 Movie
Quo Vadis
Best Picture
An American in Paris
#1 TV Show
Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts
The world at every milestone
First color TV broadcast in the US
Elvis Presley appears on The Ed Sullivan Show
Civil Rights Act signed; Beatles arrive in America
Summer of Love in San Francisco; first Super Bowl
Apollo 11: humans walk on the Moon; Woodstock festival
Watergate break-in; last Apollo Moon mission
MTV launches; first Space Shuttle flight; AIDS identified
Soviet Union dissolves; World Wide Web goes public
September 11 attacks transform the world
Osama bin Laden killed; Arab Spring sweeps the Middle East
January 6 Capitol breach; COVID vaccines roll out globally
“I prefer the company of books and old ships to that of most people.”