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Pedro Francisco Bonó. The first novel written by a Dominican was El montero (published in Paris, France in 1856), by Pedro Francisco Bonó, although some literary historians argue that the first Dominican novel is Los amores de los indios (published in Havana, Cuba in 1843) by Alejandro Angulo Guridi or even Cecilia, by the same author, which, although published incomplete in the Sunday ...
Fernando Cabrera en Los Nuevos Canibales: Antologia de la mas reciente poesia del Caribe Hispano. Santo Domingo, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Ediciones Union, Vol. II, 2003. Pena, Jose Alejandro. Las pelucas Delirantes: la poesia de la Generacion de los Ochenta dominicana. Estados Unidos: Sociedad Internacional de Escritores, 2006. Geron, Candido.
Manuel Antonio Rueda González (27 August 1921 in Monte Cristi Province – 20 December 1999 in Santo Domingo ) was a Dominican writer and pianist.. Rueda studied at the Liceo Musical at María Luisa Nanita and Oliva Pichardo De Marchena and was later a student of Manuela Jiménez.
Danza, música e instrumentos de los indios de la Española, Museo de Antopologia, Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo, Facultad de Humanidades (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic), 1974. Tablero: doce cuentos de lo popular a lo culto (stories), Taller (Santo Domingo), 1978.
La Poesía Sorprendida (Spanish for “Surprised poetry”) was a Dominican literary movement and avant-garde journal that existed from October 1943 to May 1947. Rebelling from the nationalism and realism that prevailed in Dominican poetry at the time, the sorprendistas sought to cultivate a universal poetics that explored the psyche and soul in surrealistic ways.
Pedro Julio Mir Valentín (3 June 1913, San Pedro de Macorís – 11 July 2000, Santo Domingo) was a Dominican poet and writer, named Poet Laureate of the Dominican Republic by Congress in 1984, and a member of the generation of "Independent poets of the 1940s" in Dominican poetry.
Juan Emilio Bosch y Gaviño (30 June 1909 – 1 November 2001), also known as El Profesor (spanish for the Teacher), was a Dominican politician, historian, writer, essayist, educator, and the first democratically elected president of the Dominican Republic for a brief time in 1963.
Alcides Arguedas (1879–1946), historian; Matilde Casazola; Javier del Granado (1913–1996), poet; Alfonso Gumucio Dagron; Víctor Montoya; Edmundo Paz Soldán (born 1967), novelist