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Circle of Costa Rican poets. The circle of Costa Rican poets ( círculo de poetas costarricenses) is a group of poets founded by Jorge Debravo and Laureano Albán in the early 1960s. This group of poets published the Manifiesto trascendentalista (1977), signed by Laureano Albán, Julieta Dobles, Carlos Francisco Monge, and Ronald Bonilla.
Carlos Fonseca Suárez. Carlos Fonseca Suárez (born 1987, in San José, Costa Rica) is a Costa Rican-Puerto Rican writer and academic. He is the author of the novels Colonel Lágrimas, [1] Museo animal, [2] and Austral [3]. In 2016, he was selected by the Guadalajara International Book Fair as one of the top twenty Latin American authors born ...
Evelyn Ugalde. Categories: Writers by nationality. Costa Rican people by occupation. Costa Rican literature. Central American writers. North American writers by nationality. Hidden categories: Commons category link is on Wikidata.
Maunrice Eulalee Bernard Little (7 July 1935 – 11 July 2021), known as Eulalia Bernard, was a Costa Rican writer, poet, activist, politician, diplomat, and educator. She is considered in her country as an icon of the African descent culture. [1] Bernard was the first Afro-Costa Rican woman to be published in her country.
Luis Chaves. Luis Chaves. Born. 1969. San José, Costa Rica. Occupation. Poet, prose writer, translator. Luis Chaves (born in 1969), is a Costa Rican poet, considered one of the leading figures in contemporary Costa Rican poetry. [1]
Joaquín Gutiérrez Mangel (30 March 1918 – 16 October 2000) was a Costa Rican writer who won multiple awards, and whose children's book Cocorí has been translated into ten languages. In addition to writing children's books, Gutiérrez was a chess champion, war correspondent, journalist, story-teller, translator, professor, and communist ...
Died. January 1, 1958. (1958-01-01) (aged 76) Joaquín García Monge (January 20, 1881 – January 1, 1958) is considered one of Costa Rica 's most important writers. He was born in Desamparados, Costa Rica in 1881 and was educated in both Costa Rica and Chile, where he fell under the influence of the leading literary currents of his time.
Yolanda Oreamuno Unger (8 April 1916 – 8 July 1956) was a Costa Rican writer. Her most acclaimed novel is La Ruta de su Evasión (1948). Her 40 years of life were markedly divided into two phases: the first 20 years, filled with youth, beauty and happiness, contrasted sharply with the following years of tragedy, loneliness and sickness.