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5 places

Five Places to Visit in Barcelona

The author Carlos Ruiz Zafón offers a travel guide to his hometown with a darker spin on some familiar spots.

A statue at the Cementiri de Montjüic in Barcelona. “I still love the place, no matter how creepy it is,” the Barcelona-born novelist Carlos Ruiz Zafón said of one of his favorite spots.Credit...Natalia Wisniewska for The New York Times

In Carlos Ruiz Zafón’s Barcelona, the well-trodden capital of Spain’s Catalonia region, there is still much to discover beneath the surface. “Treasures beneath the noise” are how the best-selling novelist, whose books present a vivid portrait of his native Barcelona, describes frequent haunts in his hometown.


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Carlos Ruiz Zafón, the Barcelona-born, best-selling novelistCredit...Isolde Ohlbaum

The 54-year-old author behind the series, The Cemetery of Forgotten Books (the most recent, The Labyrinth of Spirits, was published in 2018), divides his time between Barcelona and Los Angeles, where he is now based. His favorite places may sound familiar, but they take on an entirely different meaning when viewed through his fantastical lens. Here, five of Mr. Ruiz Zafón’s recommendations.

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Carlos Ruiz Zafón enjoys the curving journey of Carrer dels Banys Nous, a street that changes to Carrer d’Avinyó on its final stretch to the waterfront.Credit...Natalia Wisniewska for The New York Times

Mr. Ruiz Zafón likes the contrasts he sees when walking from the Cathedral of Barcelona to the harbor, Port Vell, via Carrer dels Banys Nous. The pedestrian-friendly route begins narrow and dark along an ancient Roman wall, cutting through the heart of the Gothic Quarter, then ends in the bright openness at the harbor. “You cross many centuries of the city, so many layers of its history.”

Carrer dels Banys Nous, Gothic Quarter


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Mr. Ruiz Zafón grew up one block from La Sagrada Familia. “It was a ruin! I knew it inside out.”Credit...Natalia Wisniewska for The New York Times

Gaudí’s massive, incomplete cathedral is a block away from where Mr. Ruiz Zafón grew up, and where his father still lives. “When I was a kid, it was a ruin! I knew it inside out. I would climb the towers and get into the tunnels, and down into workshops where they kept the religious statues.” Now, Mr. Ruiz Zafón is still drawn to the cathedral. “It’s very interesting to see how it’s changed from being a neglected place that people made fun of — ‘This is monstrous, this is garish!’ — to becoming the most visited attraction in the city.”

Carrer de Mallorca, 401, sagradafamilia.org


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“It was a perfect horror movie setting!,” the author recalled, after getting lost in Cementiri de Montjüic as a teenager.Credit...Natalia Wisniewska for The New York Times

In the cemetery’s older section, you’ll find ornate mausoleums and palaces built by 19th century tycoons who insisted on displaying their wealth, even in death. “There’s something about the combination of excess and death that I find fascinating, Mr. Ruiz Zafón said. “You’ll see these extravagant, morbid buildings with vengeful angels from Hell! It’s like the real world disappears.” He advised visitors not to get caught there after sundown when the gates are locked. He can speak from experience — as a teenager, he attempted to drive a broken-down motorcycle through the cemetery, getting terribly lost and nearly locked in. “It was a perfect horror movie setting!” he said. “But I still love the place, no matter how creepy it is.”

Carrer de la Mare de Déu de Port, 56, 58, cbsa.cat/cementiris/cementiri-montjuic


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Grand 19th century mansions line the hills leading to Tibidabo mountain.Credit...Natalia Wisniewska for The New York Times

Mr. Ruiz Zafón likes taking the funicular to the top of Tibidabo mountain. Once there, he might appreciate the stunning view of Barcelona with a drink at La Venta, a century-old restaurant. Further up the mountain is Gran Hotel La Florida, which has been restored to five-star splendor, and the Parc d’Atraccions Tibidabo, a refurbished amusement park that, to Mr. Ruiz Zafón’s chagrin, has lost some character in the modernization. Still, he’s drawn by the mountain’s history, and even by its name. “In Latin, tibidabo means ‘I’ll give you,’ which are the words the Devil uses to tempt Jesus. I always thought it was very appropriate — Barcelona has this very dark soul. It makes sense that the devil would get up on this mountain trying to tempt us with all of these worldly pleasures.”

Tibidabo funicular, tibidabo.cat/funicular


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A bar at Mercado De La Boqueria, a bustling 19th century food market that offers a glimpse of old Barcelona.Credit...Natalia Wisniewska for The New York Times

“It gives you a glimpse of what the city used to be,” he said of this legendary 19th-century food market. It’s evolved from a rough-and-tumble purveyor of goods for home cooks and chefs to a bona fide foodie destination, with stalls boasting the best of Catalonia. “There are still the most wonderful foods and spices — you can get really good tapas, which you eat standing up, made by people who have been making them for 50 years.”

La Rambla, 91, boqueria.barcelona

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section TR, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: An Author’s Picks in His Hometown. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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