Miguel de Unamuno's "Niebla" is a philosophical novel about the fragility of human existence and the boundaries between reality and fiction. The story of Augusto Pérez, a man lost in his own feelings and doubts, gradually evolves into a meditation on free will, love, and the individual's right to an independent destiny. Blurring the boundaries between author and protagonist, Unamuno creates a paradoxical and intellectually challenging text in which life itself appears as a fog-indefinite, changeable, and elusive.
The novel is presented in its original language, without adaptations or abridgements.