A Thousand Forests in One Acorn. Valerie Miles

A Thousand Forests in One Acorn - Valerie Miles


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anything, since he was invincible. Not even by resorting to all that a woman is capable of giving up in order to get something, would I liberate myself from his stubbornness.

      The traveler was still looking at me, and I lifted my head and, no longer using a casual tone with him, asked, “Do you happen to have a pattern for embroidering sheets with an interlocking J and S?”

       Translated by Emily Davis

      WORK

      1944, El misterio de la pensión Florrie, Moderna (published under the pseudonym Romo P. Girca) (novel).

      1957, El ídolo, El Mensajero del Corazón de Jesús (novel).

      1961, Las ciegas hormigas, Destino (novel, new edition published by Tusquets, 2010).

      1961, El héroe del Tonkin, Comisión Ejecutiva Proceso Canonización Beato Valentín de Berrio Ochoa (biography).

      1969, En el tiempo de los tallos verdes, Destino (novel).

      1972, Seno, Planeta (novel).

      1975, El salto, Marte (novel).

      1975, Recuerda, oh, recuerda, Ediciones del Centro (stories).

      1975, Guía secreta de Vizcaya, Al-Borak (monograph).

      1977, Antonio B... “el rojo,” ciudadano de tercera, Albia (novel reedited in 2007 by Tusquets with the title Antonio B. el Ruso, ciudadano tecera).

      1977, Primeras historias de la Guerra interminable, Luis Haranburu (stories).

      1978, La gran Guerra de doña Toda, Herriliburu, Ediciones Libropueblo (novel).

      1979, Andanzas de Txiki Baskardo, Herriliburu, Ediciones Libropueblo (novel).

      1990, Quince años, Libros Pérgola (novel).

      1997, Huesos, Bermingham (novel).

      1998, La estación de Getxo, Asociación de Vecinos del Transporte (monograph).

      2004, Verdes valles, colinas rojas I. La tierra convulsa, Tusquets (novel).

      2005, Verdes valles, colinas rojas II. Los cuerpos desnudos, Tusquets (novel).

      2005, Verdes valles, colinas rojas III. Las cenizas del hierro, Tusquets (novel).

      2006, La higuera, Tusquets (novel).

      2009, Sólo un muerto más, Tusquets (novel).

      2011, Los cuentos, Tusquets (includes both of the volumes of stories Recuerda, oh, recuerda and Primeras historias de la Guerra interminable, revised in their final edition).

      2012, Aquella edad inolvidable, Tusquets.

      2013, El cementerio vacío, Tusquets.

      •

      AWARDS AND RECOGNITIONS

      1957, Premio Mensajero (Messenger Prize) for El ídolo.

      1960, Premio Nadal (Nadal Prize) for Las ciegas hormigas.

      1961, Premio de la Crítica de narrativa castellana (Spanish Narrative Critics Award) for Las ciegas hormigas.

      1972, Finalist for Premio Planeta (Planeta Award) for Seno.

      2004, Premio Euskadi de Novela (Euskadi Award for the Novel) for Verdes valles, colinas rojas I. La tierra convulsa.

      2005, Premio de la Crítica de narrativa castellana (Spanish Book Critics Award) for Verdes valles, colinas rojas III. Las cenizas del hierro.

      2006, Premio Nacional de Narrativa (National Book Award) for Verdes valles, colinas rojas III. Las cenizas del hierro.

      2013, Premio Euskadi de Novela (Euskadi Award for the Novel) for Aquella edad inolvidable.

       (Spain, 1926)

      Ana María Matute was a very precocious writer. She was born in Barcelona on July 26, 1925 (“and not in 1926 as has been stubbornly insisted!”) into a family belonging to the petite bourgeoisie. Her father, don Facundo Matute, had established an umbrella factory on n° 60 Calle Urgell. The business led to his taking frequent trips to around Europe, which he returned from with all kinds of fantastic stories and gifts for the little Ana María (like the doll Gorogó, that ended up a part of her extensive body of literary work). These first fantasies led her to write and illustrate her first story when she was only five years old, while she was recovering from a serious renal infection. When she was eight years old, she fell ill again and her parents decided to put her under the care of her grandparents in Mansilla de la Sierra. That picturesque Riojan location became the landscape of her childhood, and the memories of those years and those people would be captured in many of her works, especially in Historias de la Artámila (1961) and in El río (1963).

      That world was broken by the explosion of the civil war, a few days before her eleventh birthday. The brutal aggression that this superimposed on her childhood memories is reflected most of all in her early books, whose protagonists are children with a vision of the world that makes a distinction between the real (adult) world and fantasy, which she depicts with great psychological subtlety.

      Educated in a religious French high school, while earning her bachelor’s, Ana María Matute broadened her academic formation by taking courses in music and painting, outlining what from that moment on would be her varied and intense intellectual activity. When she was seventeen she wrote her first novel, Pequeño teatro. She showed up at the Destino publishing house with the novel written in a notebook with a black oilcloth cover; Ignacio Agustí, the publishing director at the time, agreed, after several attempts, to meet with the young girl, and he suggested she type up the novel, and then he would read it. Two weeks later she submitted the typed (“at full speed!”) novel as well as several stories that would be published in Destino magazine. In 1948, Los Abel, her second novel, was a finalist for the Premio Nadal (won by Miguel Delibes).

      In 1952, Matute married Ramón Eugenio Goicoechea (alias “the specimen”) and two years later her son Juan Pablo was born. Over the course of a decade, Matute became the breadwinner in the family with extraordinary literary production, and began winning important prizes like Premio Nadal, Premio Nacional de Literatura, and Premio Nacional de la Crítica. Leaving behind the realist vision of the literature of that time, she developed her own voice that moved between lyrical and sensorial, achieving a genuine mixture of social criticism and poetic message. As Pere Gimferrer has said of her: “She’s unlike any other author. Some have said she’s like Faulkner; actually it’s really that her way of being unlike anyone else makes you think about the way Faulkner was unlike anyone else.”

      Her marriage fell apart in 1963 and Spanish law under Franco prohibited her from seeing her son, leaving her overcome with intense emotional suffering. She kept on writing anyway: Los soldados lloran de noche (1964) and the children’s story “El polizón del Ulises” (1965) and she completed the trilogy that began with Primera memoria, which was followed by Algunos muchachos (1964) and La trampa (1969). In 1976, Ana María Matute was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature and in 1984 she won the Premio Nacional de Literatura Infantil for “Sólo un pie descalzo.”

      Then she met Julio Brocard, at whose side she lived several very happy years until he passed away the day she turned sixty-five. Once again, she kept on writing, aware that literature had been and would be “the savior lighthouse of many of her storms.” In 1996, she published Olvidado Rey Gudú (“the book I wanted to write ever since I was a girl, all of my obsessions are in it”), one of her most celebrated novels that,


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