Once upon a Time Ana maría Matute: a Hundred Years of an Extraordinary Author
3 Articles
3 Articles
In the postwar Barcelona, a teenage girl took courage and decided to go to the publishing house Destino to carry in person, in a handwritten notebook with black rubber covers, a novel. She went for several days, overcoming her shyness, before achieving a meeting with the director of the label, who, patiently and one can imagine that with remarkable paternalism, informed her that she had to machine it before presenting it. So she did and presente…
This July 26th marks the centenary of the birth of Ana María Matute (Barcelona, 1925), one of the great storytellers of 20th-century Spanish literature, who transcended generations to reach our days with the same relevance and relevance as a century ago. Beyond her numerous awards and recognitions—such as the "K" chair at the Royal Spanish Academy (RAE) previously occupied by Carmen Conde, the Planeta Prize in 1954, the Nadal Prize in 1959, and …
The fascinating intimate and literary personality of a narrator who boasted of her naivety and who always claimed the child she was. This Saturday she would have turned 100. More information: Ana María Matute, the good fairy of our lyrics: stranded in a sad childhood, but saved by books
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