Chuva Braba

Chuva Braba (Portuguese meaning Strong Rain) is a novel published in 1956 by Cape Verdean author Manuel Lopes. The book was awarded the Fernão Mendes Pinto award.[1] Along with Claridade, Baltazar Lopes participated with Manuel Lopes and Jorge Barbosa with founded members of the review and the name was the movement in the main activists of the same.

Chuva Braba
First edition
AuthorManuel Lopes
CountryCape Verde
LanguagePortuguese
Publication date
1956
Media typePrint
OCLC654427394

In other languages

The book has been translated into English by Rosendo Évora Brito, titled Wild Rain, published in 1982 and re-issued in 1994. The Spanish version of the novel was translated by Rodolfo Alpízar Castillo and was published in Cuba in 1989.

gollark: Oh, so they're harder to cool despite the same total heat output because of the greater density of 7nm? That does make more sense.
gollark: I guess that you could maybe, I don't know, have differences in *measured* temperature depending on where the thermal sensors are, or have different fan control. But that couldn't really change total heat output.
gollark: The *only way* it can heat up is by converting electricity to heat when operating.
gollark: That makes absolutely no sense.
gollark: You are obviously not seeing the people without issues by looking there though.

References

  1. Baptista, Maria Luísa (2007). "Vertentes da Insularidade na Novelística de Manuel Lopes" (PDF). Centro de Estudos Africanos da Universidade do Porto. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
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