Eunice Odio
Eunice Odio (pseudonym, Catalina Mariel; San José, Costa Rica, October 18, 1919 – Mexico City, Mexico, March 23, 1974) was a notable Latin American poet. She wrote articles, essays, reflections, letters, short stories and children's literature. Odio worked as a journalist and she also taught English and French. She left an extensive body of poetic work.[1] In addition to Costa Rica and Mexico, she also lived in Cuba, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and the United States.[2] She married the painter Rodolfo Zanabria in order to gain Mexican citizenship.[3]
Selected works
- Los elementos terrestres, 1948
- Zona en territorio del alba, 1953
- El tránsito de fuego, 1957
- El rastro de las mariposas, 1970
- Territorio del alba y otros poemas, 1974
- Eunice Odio Antología, 1975
Translations
- The Fire's Journey, Part I: Integration of the Parents (Tavern Books, 2013)
- The Fire's Journey, Part II: Creation of Myself (Tavern Books, 2015)
- The Fire's Journey, Part III: The Cathedral's Work (Tavern Books, 2018)
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gollark: Ħ this so much.
gollark: When it crashes, it just regexes the broken part.
gollark: Perhaps I don't either, and all my behavior is controlled by an inscrutable perl program with about 1000 lines of bizarre regexes.
gollark: Look, you may never know my *real* motivations.
References
- O'neal Coto, Katzy (2012). "Obra poética de Eunice Odio resurge entre la crítica". Universidad de Costa Rica. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
- Tapscott, Stephen (1996). Twentieth-Century Latin American Poetry: A Bilingual Anthology. University of Texas Press. pp. 282–. ISBN 978-0-292-78140-5.
- Chaves, José Ricardo (7 April 2013). "El laberinto de Eunice Odio". La Nacion (in Spanish). San José, Costa Rica. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
External links
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