Monday, 12 June 2017

PERE CALDERS: TALES OF ILLUSION IN THE MEXICAN EXILE

Pere Calders i Rossinyol
Today, The Grandma wants to talk about one of her favourite writers: Pere Calders.

Pere Calders i Rossinyol  (29 September 1912-21 July 1994) was a Catalan writer and cartoonist. He was born in Barcelona and he became known at the beginning of the 1930s for his drawings, articles and stories which were published in newspapers and magazines. 

At twenty-four, he published his first books: the collection of stories El primer arlequí, The first harlequin, and the brief novel La glòria del doctor Larén, Doctor Laren's glory

Exiled in Mexico for twenty-three years, along with his brother-in-law, the writer Avel·lí Artís Gener "Tísner", he composed his most critically well-received works, in particular the short stories Cròniques de la veritat oculta, Chronicles of the hidden truth, 1955 and Gent de l'alta vall, People of the high valley, 1957, and the novel Ronda naval sota la boira, Raval round under the fog, 1966. He returned to Catalonia in 1962. 

More information:  Asymptote Journal

Alongside publishing work and journalistic collaborations, he wrote L'ombra de l'atzavara, The shadow of the agave, 1964, with which he won the Premi Sant Jordi de novel·la. With the arrival of democracy, he became popular as a result of the success of the theatrical assembly Antaviana, created by the company Dagoll Dagom, based on some of Pere's short stories. Since then, most of his books have been republished. He received the Premi d'Honor de les Lletres Catalanes (1986), and shortly before his death was awarded the National Prize from Journalism (1993). He was a Member of the Association of Catalan-language Writers.



 

It is interesting to note how often 
the most perfect happiness precedes the bad times. 

Pere Calders

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