lunes, 28 de octubre de 2013

Tale: Ana Maria Shua - Microfiction - Shipwreck - Bio data - Links







SHIPWRECK

Lower the jib! orders the captain. Lower the jib! repeats the first mate. Luff starboard! shouts the captain. Luff starboard! repeats the first mate. Careful with the bowsprit! shouts the captain. The bowsprit! repeats the first mate. Take down the mizzenmast! shouts the captain. The mizzenmast! repeats the first mate. Meanwhile, the storm's getting worse and we sailors are running around the deck confused. If we can't find a dictionary soon, we're going to wreck for sure.

Translated from Spanish by Steven Stewart
Microfiction
Bison Books, University of Nebraska Press, 2010


Ana María Shua (born in Buenos Aires, April 22, 1951) is an Argentine writer who has published over eighty books in numerous genres including: novels, short stories, micro fiction, poetry, drama, children's literature, books of humor and Jewish folklore, anthologies, film scripts, journalistic articles, and essays. Her writing has been translated into many languages, including English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, Swedish, Korean, Japanese, Bulgarian, and Serbian.[1] Her stories appear in anthologies throughout the world. She has received numerous national and international awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, and is one of Argentina’s premier living writers. She is particularly known in the Spanish-speaking world on both sides of the Atlantic as “the Queen of the Microstory.”[1][2][3][4]


Biography

Shua published her first book on poetry, El sol y yo, when she was fifteen years old,[5] in 1967, for which she received the Honor Strip given by the Argentine Society of Writers. She studied at the University of Buenos Aires and obtained a master's degree in Arts and Literature.[citation needed] During the last military dictatorship in Argentina, often called the National Reorganization Process, she was exiled to France where she worked for the Spanish magazine Cambio 16.[citation needed] Once back in Argentina, she published her first novel, entitled Soy paciente, in 1980, for which she won an award given by Losada publishing house.[citation needed] In 1984, she published La sueñera, a collection of micro fiction. She has worked as a journalist, a publicist, and a screenwriter, adapting some of her writings.[citation needed] She has also written books for children, for which she received some international awards.[citation needed]

Works

[4]
Novel

    Soy paciente (Patient, 1980)
    Los amores de Laurita (1984)
    El libro de los recuerdos (The book of memories, 1994)
    La muerte como efecto secundario (Death as a side effect, 1997)
    El peso de la tentación (2007)

Short story Collections

    Los días de pesca (1981)
    Viajando se conoce gente (1988)
    Como una buena madre (2001)
    Historias verdaderas (2004)

Microfiction Collections

    La sueñera (1984)
    Casa de geishas (1992)
    Botánica del caos (2000)
    Temporada de fantasmas (Ghost season, 2004)
    Cazadores de Letras (2009)
    Microfictions (2009)
    Quick fix (2008)
    Fenómenos de circo (2011)

Children's books

    La batalla de los elefantes y los cocodrilos (1988)
    La fábrica del terror (1991), Honor List Award by the International Board on Books for Young People
    La puerta para salir del mundo (1992)
    Cuentos judíos con fantasmas y demonios (1994)
    Ani salva a la perra Laika (1996)
    Historia de un cuento (1998)
    Cuentos con magia (1999)
    La luz mala (2000)
    Los monstruos del Riachuelo (2001)
    Planeta miedo (2002)
    Su primera zanahoria (2005)
    Un ciervo muy famoso (2005)

Humorous fiction

    El marido argentino promedio (1991)
    Risas y emociones en la cocina judía (2003)

Poetry Collections

    El sol y yo (1967)

Movie Adaptations

    Soy paciente (1986)
    Los amores de Laurita (1986)
    ¿Dónde estás amor de mi vida que no te puedo encontrar? (1992)

References

    ^ Jump up to: a b Words Without Borders, [1], Author Bio: Ana María Shua, 2011
    Jump up ^ Sotelo, Roberto, Autores N° 31: Ana María Shua, Imaginaria: Revista quincenal de literatura infantil y juvenil, 9 August 2000 (in Spanish)
    Jump up ^ The International Literary Quarterly, [2], Contributor Bio: Ana María Shua, 2008
    ^ Jump up to: a b Ana María Shua, [3], Ana María Shua, 2011
    Jump up ^ Alyce Cook, [4], All Facets of Ana María Shua's Creative World, 2001

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ana_Mar%C3%ADa_Shua

Ana María Shúa - Paloma Fabrykant (Hija)



Tale: Ana Maria Shua - Microfiction - Shipwreck - Bio data - Links






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