The standard Spanish translation, rendered by Miguel Sáenz (for Alfaguara in the early 1980s), is a masterclass in fidelity with creative necessity.
Furthermore, Ende’s play on Geschichte (story/history) is lost in both Romance languages. Spanish historia and Portuguese história mean both “history” and “story.” Ende’s title implies an infinite chronicle of events (history) that is also a personal tale. The translations preserve this ambiguity—a rare win.
La historia sin fin - Neverending story - spa-por... La historia sin fin -Neverending story- spa-por...
The Spanish La historia sin fin and Portuguese A História Sem Fim are not perfect replicas of Ende’s original; no translation can be. Yet, in their imperfections, they reveal the core truth of the novel: a story is never the same once it crosses a linguistic border. The Spanish version, with its intimate tú and precise neologisms, leans into the emotional identification with Bastian. The Brazilian version, with its philosophical Nada and typographical compromises, leans into the existential dread of losing oneself in fiction.
The Infinite Labyrinth of Translation: Narrative Metafiction and Cultural Transposition in La historia sin fin (Spanish and Portuguese Contexts) The standard Spanish translation, rendered by Miguel Sáenz
The final chapters, where Bastian loses his memory, are notoriously difficult. The Spanish translation emphasizes the desmemoria (unremembering) as a spiritual rather than clinical process, aligning with Spanish literary traditions of magical realism, even though Ende explicitly rejected that genre.
The Spanish and Portuguese both render Mondenkind (Moon child) as “daughter of the moon,” gendering the Childlike Empress female (which is correct) but losing the gender-neutral tenderness of Kind . Both choose Nada over more elaborate terms, confirming a shared Iberian-Romance preference for stark negation. The translations preserve this ambiguity—a rare win
In both Spain and Latin America, and in Brazil, the 1984 film (dubbed as La historia sin fin and A História Sem Fim ) overshadowed the book for a generation. The film ends with Bastian flying on Falkor against the Nothing—a triumphant, Hollywood-friendly resolution. Ende hated the film because it excised the entire second half of the novel (Bastian’s hubris and redemption).
Early Brazilian editions often printed the entire book in black ink due to cost, relying instead on different font families (serif for Fantasia, sans-serif for reality). This fundamentally changes the reading experience. Where Ende intended a sensual, almost synesthetic switch (red to green), the Portuguese reader must intellectually process a typographical shift. Some later luxury editions restored the colors, but the mass-market paperback creates a different, more cerebral Neverending Story .