Marcela Serrano

Marcela Serrano (born 1951) is a Chilean novelist. In 1994, her first novel, Para que no me olvides, won the Literary Prize in Santiago, and her second book, Nosotros que nos queremos tanto, won the Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize for women writers in Spanish. She received the runner-up award in the renowned Premio Planeta competition in 2001 for her novel Lo que está en mi corazón. Carlos Fuentes has quoted her description of the modern woman as "having the capacity to change skin like a snake, freeing herself from the inevitability and servitude of more obsolete times."[1]

Biography

Marcela Serrano is the daughter of novelist Elisa Serrana and engineer and essayist Horacio Serrano.[2]

She is considered a "late editor" -- "I began to write at age 38 and recently at age 40, I published my first novel" -- even though as a girl she wrote "dozens of books", she threw them all out. That first novel appeared in 1991: We who love ourselves very much, which was an immediate success the next year and later received two prizes. She has published a series of works, one of them was from the "género negro" and other children's books, which is ultimately joined together with Margarita Maira, one of her daughters.

Literary awards

Books

  • Nosotras que nos queremos tanto, 1991 - Suma de Letras (paperback 2002), ISBN 84-95501-32-5
  • Para que no me olvides, 1993
  • Antigua Vida Mia, 1995 - tr. Margaret Sayers Peden, Antigua and My Life Before: A Novel, Anchor (2001), ISBN 0-385-49802-0. Filmed by Hector Olivera in 2001.
  • Lo que está en mi corazón,[4] - Booket (paperback 2003), ISBN 84-08-04378-1
  • El albergue de las mujeres tristes, 1997 - Paperback - Oct 2, 2004
  • Nuestra Señora de la Soledad, 1999
  • Un mundo raro: Dos relatos mexicanos, 2000.
  • Lo que está en mi corazón, 2001
  • El cristal del miedo, with Margarita Maira, 2002,
  • Hasta siempre, mujercitas, 2004
  • La llorona, 2008
  • Diez mujeres, 2011
  • Dulce enemiga mía, 2013 (collection of short stories)
  • La Novena, novela, 2016
gollark: Stuff like repetitive tasks, adding large columns of numbers, etc, are hard for humans (we get bored and can't do maths very efficiently), but computers can happily do them easily.
gollark: You could probably replace a significant amount of office workers with some SQL queries and possibly language model things.
gollark: Humans don't realize this because brains will happily do it with zero intellectual effort.
gollark: Manipulating objects in 3D space has apparently been found to be quite hard.
gollark: I agree, somewhat!

References

  1. Carlos Fuentes, This I Believe: An A to Z of a Life, Random House (2005), ISBN 1-4000-6246-2 -p.18
  2. Rodríguez Villouta, Mili (15 January 2000). "La bella pimpante" [The Beautiful Lively One] (PDF). El Mercurio El Sábado (in Spanish). pp. 16–20. Retrieved 6 March 2019 via Biblioteca Nacional de Chile.
  3. S.A.P., El Mercurio. "Marcela Serrano ganó segundo lugar en el Premio Planeta de Novela 2001". diario.elmercurio.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2016-11-02.
  4. Serrano, Marcela. 2001. "Lo que está en mi corazón" Harper Collins; New York. ISBN 978-0-06-156545-8 Paperback. Editorial Planeta.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.