Confabulario

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Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2007 - 101 páginas
En este Confabulario -compuesto con cuentos y prosas de muy dufentes facturas e intenciones--, Juan Jose Arreola nos ofrece las diversas y fascinantes concepciones de una imaginacion que se halla audazmente dispuesta a la aventura verbal. El filantropico afan, cientificamente metafisico, de un sabio de la desintegracion que se propone salvar almas de ricos haciendo pasar el camello por el ojo de una aguja, el exito o el fracaso de insondables catapultas romanas, un heroe citadino de la cortesia de autobus, hormigas duenas del unico miligramo prodigioso, Aristoteles enamorado y Gongora pidiendo pan son asuntos que emergen de este libro singular en el que, de una pagina a otra, el lector esta situado siempre al borde de la sorpresa.

Sobre el autor (2007)

Juan Jose Arreola, 1918 - 2001 Juan Jose Arreola was born in 1918 in Ciudad Guzman in the western state of Jalisco. Although he never finished elementary school, he managed to teach himself to read and got a job as an apprentice to a bookbinder. In 1941, Arreola got a job as a reporter and eventually became head of the circulation department for El Occidental in Guadalajara. In Guadalajara, Arreola befriended Juan Rulfo, a famous Mexican writer. Arreola would later adopt Rulfo's style of writing when he himself took up the trade. In 1943, Arreola published "Hizo el Bien Mientras Vivio" or "He Did Good While He Lived" in the magazine Eos. Two years later, he won a scholarship to study in Paris. Upon his return, he finished "Varia Invencion" or "Diverse Inventions" which went on to redefine Mexican literature with its mixture of poetry and prose. The story was so well received that a new genre was named after the title of the story. Arreola's next title, "Confabulario" firmly established his reputation. Arreola went on to publish 16 more books of short stories. In 1976 he won the National Linguistics and Literature prize, and later he won the Juan Rulfo Prize for Latin American and Caribbean Literature. Arreola was also named an Officer of Arts and Letters by the French Government. Juan Jose Arreola died at the age of 83 in his home in Guadalajara on December 3, 2001.

Información bibliográfica