Showing posts with label writers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writers. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 January 2010

Obituary

If you haven't read "The Catcher in the Rye", this is the right time to do it. The death of JD Salinger is a sad moment for literature. The novel, a tale of a rebellious and lonely teenager who has been expelled from school for his poor grades, published in 1951, has sold over 60 million copies and sells thousands every year.The novel is very controversial and has been banned in some schools because ot its bad language and antiauthoritarian stance.


The writer himself has been a mysterious individual who has lived in seclusion. What has he been doing in the last 55 years before he died? John Walsh, a journalist who works for The Independent, and many like him, wonder whether there's more writing in the drawer that might have been written while he was withdrawn from the world.

Meet Holden Caufield, the protagonist, and you will understand why 
Salinger's voice is so powerful. 

Give us your opinion!

Tuesday, 2 December 2008

Juan Marsé, Premio Cervantes 2008


Spanish novelist, Juan Marsé (Barcelona 1933) belongs to the group of realists from the 50s rooted in Barcelona, together with Jaime Gil de Biedma, Carlos Barral, José Agustín Goytisolo, Juan García Hortelano, Manuel Vázquez Montalbán, Juan Goytisolo, Terenci Moix and Eduardo Mendoza.
La oscura historia de la prima Montse, is a key novel in his career as a writer as this is the novel where we can find the events and characters that have obsessed him throughout his life as a writer. In this book he expresses strong feelings and opinions about Catalan society under Franco's regime.
Some of his novels, such as Últimas tardes con Teresa, Si te dicen que caí, La muchacha de las bragas de oro and El amante bilingüe, have been adapted for the cinema or the theatre with little success.
Marsé analyzes the moral and social downfall of postwar Spain, class differences in his native Barcelona, the memories of those who lost the Civil War, the fight between workers and burgeois students and lost childhood. He analyzes Spanish society with the techniques of social realism, although, sometimes, he also experiments with other more avant-guard mechanisms, always with irony and satire and humour. His books have often been censored in the past.
Have you read any of his books. Well, if you haven't, this is an opportunity to see if his writing is still alive. Did he deserve this prize? Tell us your opinion.

Thursday, 9 October 2008

News


The French writer Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio has been awarded The Nobel Prize for Literature. What do you think?