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In 1990, Carlos Saura wrote and directed a 55-minute television movie based on El Sur entitled Los Cuentos De Borges: El Sur (English: The Borges Tales: The South). Saura's film takes place in more modern times (1990), and Saura also attempts to strengthen autobiographical themes found in the original story. [5]
El Sur (English: The South) is a 1990 TV movie written and directed by Carlos Saura and is a chapter in the Spanish TV series Los Cuentos de Borges (English: The Borges Tales). Saura's 55-minute film is based on the short story El Sur by Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges .
Claudia returned to El Salvador with her husband in 1927, after Leroy was appointed United States consul, the same year she gave birth to her only son Roy Beers Brannon. Claudia became friends with other poets and writers in El Salvador, among those were Salarrué, Alberto Guerra Trigueros, Serafin Quiteño and Alberto Masferrer.
Biografía de un arcángel (Estuario editora, 2012) En este lugar maravilloso vive la tristeza (Estuario editora, 2011) El grito (Editorial Artefato, 2005) Vivir es peligroso (Libros de Tierra Firme, 2001, Buenos Aires; Premio del Ministerio de Cultura) Perdidos manuscritos de la noche (Carlos Marchest Editor, 1996; Premio del Ministerio de ...
Zaira Nara was born in Boulogne Sur Mer, ... 2008 — El Libro de la Selva; 2013-2014 — Los locos Grimaldi; References External links. Official page on ...
Félix Rubén García Sarmiento (18 January 1867 – 6 February 1916), known as Rubén Darío (US: / d ɑː ˈ r iː oʊ / dah-REE-oh, [1] [2] Spanish: [ruˈβen daˈɾi.o]), was a Nicaraguan poet who initiated the Spanish-language literary movement known as modernismo (modernism) that flourished at the end of the 19th century.
El llano en llamas (translated into English as The Burning Plain and Other Stories, [1] The Plain in Flames, [2] and El Llano in flames [3]) is a collection of short stories written in Spanish by Mexican author Juan Rulfo. The stories were written over several years for different literary magazines, starting in 1945 with They Gave Us The Land. [4]
Salomón de la Selva was born on March 20, 1893, in León, Nicaragua, son of Salomón Selva Glenton and Evangelina Escoto Baca and the oldest of nine children.In 1906 at the age of twelve, he is offered a scholarship by the government of José Santos Zelaya to study in the United States.