Collective monograph published in Barcelona in 2019 under the title Las respuestas a las 10 grandes preguntas que todos nos hacemos sobre Vox (Answers to the 10 biggest questions we ask about Vox) was edited by John Müller, journalist of the Spanish newspaper El Mundo. John Müller gathered a powerful team of nine researchers and journalists competent in the issue to provide answers to the major questions about the right-wing populist party Vox, which derives its name from the Latin word for voice. The book written in scientific-journalistic style comprises ten chapters, an introduction, and a conclusion. It opens with a sociological image of Vox partisans. The party is traditionally supported by the region of Andalusia where it first made itself known and widely recognized, as well as by the right-wing Spanish electorate. These voters are conservative-minded and disillusioned with the socialists and the People’s Party. The second chapter discusses the history of the Party, starting from its creation on December 17, 2013, by the former members of the People’s Party and its public presentation at a press conference in Madrid on January 16, 2014. Chapter 3 is devoted to the portrayal of the political leadership of the Party with an emphasis on its leader Santiago Abascal Conde. Born in Bilbao in 1976 into a family of prominent politicians, Santiago Abascal followed in his father’s and grandfather’s footsteps and joined the People’s Party, then in opposition. Because of the political work, namely their staunch position against the separation of the Basque Country and Catalonia from Spain, the family was threatened by the terrorist group ETA. The feeling of an imminent threat might account for another vein of Abascal’s political aspirations – the right to defensive gun use and ownership for the Spaniards. In this part of the book, Abascal is depicted as ultra-right and xenophobic, though Abascal denies such allegations. Chapter 4 analyses the reasons for the split in the People’s Party that gave rise to the Vox party. The intraparty struggle revolved around Basque separatism, terrorism, and taxation issues. Further on the authors investigate the ideology of right-wing populism in Spain and explain the reasons for its wide support, the economic policy of neoliberalism, similar to Franco’s one, and tax cuts for large businesses among them. The book is based on Abascal’s public speeches and taps into the works of prominent political scientists.