Next May, it will be three years since the death of Aless, the common son between Ana Obregón and Alessandro Lecquio. In the midst of the maternity maternity of the television biologist by surrogate pregnancy, it has come to light that El chico de las musarañas will be published on April 19, the book that the young man was writing and that was never finished.
With a few weeks to go before its publication, Sálvame has revealed that part of its content has been leaked, despite the fact that it would be “under lock and key and is absolutely confidential”, as Mayte Ametlla has assured in the Telecinco program. “No one, absolutely no one at the publisher, knows the content of that book,” she has said.
Because the book was left unfinished after Aless’s death, it was Ana Obregón herself who was in charge of finishing it. This is how she exposed it herself on her social networks, through a publication in which she claimed to be “immersed” in her writing. “I want you to know the emotion and pride I feel when one of the best editors in this country tells me that what you wrote is impressive,” Ana says in it.
The existence of The Boy with the Shrews was revealed at the time by Aless Lecquio, also on his social profiles. In another publication, the son of Ana Obregón made a small synopsis of what his readers would find in it: “It is about a clueless boy (me) who takes a seat every day where the sun goes down and talks with his four metaphorical shrews, each with a completely different personality and way of being,” she wrote.
Although the leaked content is much more extensive, Ametlla has focused on two specific phrases from the book that refer to “those four people with whom he has great conversations” and which, due to their meaning, could be dedicated to Ana Obregón.
The first of them says the following: “You have the bad habit of putting only one face on happiness and when you don’t find it, it rains seas and hurricane winds roar.” In another he is even more emphatic: “There are times when we have happiness in the palm of our hands, but we become silent and lose ourselves in the usual, when the key is to raise your head and look where never before.” “Decipher for yourselves the content of those words,” concluded Mayte Ametlla, summoning the “month of May”, when Ana will present the book.