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Displaying items by tag: Latin American literature

The Dead Women of Juárez

Friday, 13 January 2012 14:56 Published in Literature

Since 1993 over four hundred women have been abducted and murdered in Ciudad Juárez and Chihuahua (both are in in the state of Chihuahua, north Mexico). Many of the women are brutally beaten and raped before being killed and their bodies dumped in the desert or on a secluded street. Others simply disappear without trace.

7 Ways to Kill a Cat by Matias Néspolo

Thursday, 22 December 2011 19:05 Published in Literature

When Argentina suffered financial collapse in 2001, demonstrators took to the streets and there were violent confrontations followed by a police crackdown. This is the turbulent backdrop to Matías Néspolo’s debut novel, first published in Spanish in 2009 and fluidly translated by Frank Wynne. It proves particularly topical given the recent global protests.

Interview with Iosi Havilio

Tuesday, 22 November 2011 11:40 Published in Literature

Iosi Havilio was born in Buenos Aires in 1974. Open Door is his first novel. His second novel is Estocolmo (Stockholm, 2010), and he is currently working on a sequel to Open Door. He has become a cult author in Argentina after Open Door was highly praised by the outspoken and influential writer Rodolfo Fogwill and by the most influential Argentine critic, Beatriz Sarlo.

Down These Mean Streets by Piri Thomas

Saturday, 12 November 2011 12:30 Published in Literature

Why do so many of us remain indifferent when a bloodied face pops up bearing witness to our society’s vicious inequalities? This is the first question that always strikes me whenever I read a work like Piri Thomas’ 1967 novel, Down These Mean Streets, about the author’s ghetto youth in Spanish Harlem. The answer is not far off. It can be found in the book and it lies within me.

Book Review - Good Offices by Evelio Rosero

Tuesday, 08 November 2011 20:51 Published in Literature

The Catholic Church has had a bad press of late with a series of damaging child-abuse scandals and shameful cover-ups. Its opposition to contraception and abortion, its subjugation of women and its homophobia have also come under fire. EvelioRosero, prize-winning author of The Armies, offers a unique take on the Catholic Church’s institutional failings in this surreal portrait of one of its Colombian outposts.

Campaign for Mexican Writers

Thursday, 27 October 2011 18:29 Published in Literature

Mexico’s El Día de Muertos (Day of the Dead) dates back to indigenous times. However, many of the celebrations associated with the festival, which takes place from 31 – 2 November, have evolved over time.

In the 1890s, Jose Guadalupe Posada began the tradition of depicting satirical images of politicians and celebrities as skeletons. 

Horacio Castellanos Moya

Monday, 03 October 2011 20:22 Published in Literature

Horacio Castellanos Moya was born in Honduras and raised in El Salvador. Throughout his career as a journalist and author, he has lived in Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, Germany and Japan, among others.

Juan Pablo Villalobos

Sunday, 07 August 2011 18:43 Published in Literature

Juan Pablo Villalobos was born in Guadalajara, Mexico, in 1973. He studied marketing and Spanish literature. He has done a great deal of market research and published travel stories, and literary and film criticism. He has researched such diverse topics as the influence of the avant-garde on the work of César Aira and the flexibility of pipelines for electrical installations.

Marcelo Figueras

Sunday, 10 July 2011 18:26 Published in Literature

MARCELO FIGUERAS, born in Buenos Aires in 1962, is a writer and screenwriter. He currently lives in Barcelona. His novel Kamchatka (Atlantic Books, 2010) was shortlisted for the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize.

Carla Guelfenbein

Sunday, 15 May 2011 20:54 Published in Literature

CARLA GUELFENBEIN was born in Santiago, Chile, and lived in England for 11 years, where she took degrees at the University of Essex and Central St Martin's. Returning to Chile, she worked as Art  and Fashion Director for the magazine Elle, until she decided to become a full-time novelist.

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