Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It should only contain pages that are Facial features or lists of Facial features, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories).
This is a list of Salvadoran writers, including novelists, short story writers, poets, and journalists. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
This series of books is the first collection of Salvadoran folklore in English. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The stories that make up Timeless Stories of El Salvador, the first series of books by Federico Navarrete , focus on urban, colonial, indigenous legends (from mainly Pipil , Maya , and Lenca origins) as well as stories that have been transmitted by oral ...
The culture of El Salvador is a Central American culture nation influenced by the clash of ancient Mesoamerica and medieval Iberian Peninsula. Salvadoran culture is influenced by Native American culture (Lenca people, Cacaopera people, Maya peoples, Pipil people) as well as Latin American culture (Latin America, Hispanic America, Ibero-America).
Salvador is a 1983 nonfiction book by Joan Didion on American involvement in the Salvadoran Civil War. [1] Most of the book is based on three extended essays Didion published in The New York Review of Books in November and December 1982. [2] [3] She spent two weeks in El Salvador in June 1982 and referred to the experience as "terrifying."
Salvadorans (Spanish: Salvadoreños), also known as Salvadorians, are citizens of El Salvador, a country in Central America.Most Salvadorans live in El Salvador, although there is also a significant Salvadoran diaspora, particularly in the United States, with smaller communities in other countries around the world.
José Salvador Alvarenga (Spanish: [xoˈse salβaˈðoɾ alβaˈɾeŋɡa]; born c. 1975) is a Salvadoran fisherman and author who was found on January 30, 2014, aged 36 or 37, [nb 1] on the Marshall Islands after spending 14 months adrift in a fishing boat in the Pacific Ocean beginning on November 17, 2012.
Clue (or Cluedo) Mysteries (sometimes called Clue Mysteries, 15 whodunits to solve in minutes) are two books released in 2003 and 2004 based upon the Clue board game. Both were written by Canadian author, Vicki Cameron. Cameron lives in Ontario.