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The Stories of Eva Luna (Spanish: Cuentos de Eva Luna) is a collection of Spanish-language short stories by the Chilean-American writer Isabel Allende.It consists of stories told by the title character of Allende's earlier novel Eva Luna.
Nos han dado la tierra: They gave us the land: Pan Magazine, Issue 2, July 1945 [8] 2: La cuesta de las comadres: The Hill of the Mothers-in-law: América Magazine, Issue 55, February 1948 [8] 3: Es que somos muy pobres: We're just very poor: América Magazine, Issue 54, August 1947 [8] 4: El hombre: The man: Llano en Llamas First Edition, 1953 ...
This production is relegated to propaganda forming part of the Francoist grip on culture in Spain of the 1940s, [96] “intachables desde el punto de vista de la moralidad de sus escritos” and “guardiana de los valores tradicionales consagrados por la naciente España franquista”, [97] at times referred to a “subliteratura” or ...
In 1979 she won the Premio Sésamo for her work El bandido doblemente armado, the Premio Planeta in 1989 for Queda la noche, and the Premio Anagrama de Ensayo in 1993 with La vida oculta. Puértolas was elected to Seat g of the Real Academia Española on 28 January 2010, she took up her seat on 21 November the same year. [ 3 ]
The Juan Bobo tales originally migrated from Spain in an oral tradition influenced by the Spanish picaresque novels (Lazarillo de Tormes; Don Quijote) and Wise Fool tales. [ 21 ] [ 22 ] Published anonymously in 1554, El Lazarillo de Tormes is often viewed as the first modern novel, and “picaresque” became the first genre – a genre of ...
Obras completas (y otros cuentos), 1959. Complete Works (and Other Stories) La oveja negra y demás fábulas, 1969. The Black Sheep and Other Fables, trans. Walter I. Bradbury (Doubleday, 1971) [7] The Black Sheep and Other Fables, trans. Rupert Glasgow and Philip Jenkins (Tadworth: Acorn, 2005. ISBN 978-0954495954) Movimiento perpetuo, 1972.
María García Granados y Saborío (1860 – May 10, 1878), also known as La Niña de Guatemala ("The Girl of Guatemala"), was a Guatemalan socialite, daughter of General Miguel García Granados, who was President of Guatemala from 1871 to 1873 and whose house served as a gathering for the top artists and writers of the time.
Los brujos de la tormenta primaveral, and Cuculcàn were added to Leyendas de Guatemala in the second edition which came out in 1948. [64] While initially they appear to break the formal unity of Leyendas (as Cuculcán is a piece which appears to be for theater), they follow the same stories and themes, and both appear to have been written ...