Post by shakhar23 on Feb 26, 2024 23:43:22 GMT -5
The feeling of friendship and its consequent betrayal is one of the recurring themes in our literary tradition, with peaks rarely reached such as those between Falstaff and Prince Hal in Shakespeare's work. It would also seem that like any perishable feeling, that of friendship carries traits similar to love but attenuated by the absence of the peremptory demand of desire, that is, it is susceptible to becoming drama, rarely tragedy, as happens in Enrique Shakespeare's IV , which creates a character of such magnitude that in Henry praise of Falstaff has features similar to Plato's descriptions of Socrates' last moments after ingesting hemlock. friend Ana Merino (Madrid, ), author of nine collections of poems, among which the first of them shines with a special light, Preparations for a trip , which won the Adonais Prize in , as well as plays, such as Amorveryfragile.
Redemption or Save the Elephant... in addition to being one of the first to introduce the world of comics with special zeal into the academic field, she has just published Amigo , her third foray into narrative after The Man with Two Hearts , a which followed The Saudi Arabia Mobile Number List Map of Affections, awarded the Nadal Prize in It is a story that takes up the classic theme of friendship and betrayal, without whose action this state cannot be valued in its proper measure, in such a way that without Death, life itself, would be meaningless because it is the complementary other side. Inés Santa Cruz is a Mexican poet who teaches a creative writing course in the United States, where it seems that everyone wants to write and no one wants to read, and she arrives at the Student Residence with the intention of teaching a poetry workshop and investigating the archive of Joaquín Amigo, who maintained a certain friendly relationship with Lorca in those years and of whom he learned of its existence because the Residence had attached the news of the discovery in a press release.
Amigo was also shot in the civil war and while Inés consults those archives, the memory of her relationships with Sabino Viñuela comes to her strongly, which for Santa Cruz had the strength and ecstasy of those of Hernán Cortés and Malinche: “I spend the life visiting cathedrals, playing sacred music throughout Central Europe. I am the spirit of Bach remastered and with twenty extra kilos. You, on the other hand, my Malinche, are beautiful. What's your secret? It had been a long time since they had called her Malinche. The year they met at the Student Residence, Sabino had just read The Labyrinth of Solitude by Octavio Paz and was enthusiastic about the chapter titled “The Children of Malinche,” where the Mexican poet developed his theory about the symbolic existence of woman as mother and traitor. Sabino, as soon as he had confidence in Inés, baptized her with the name that the Mexicans gave to the first female interpreter in history.
Redemption or Save the Elephant... in addition to being one of the first to introduce the world of comics with special zeal into the academic field, she has just published Amigo , her third foray into narrative after The Man with Two Hearts , a which followed The Saudi Arabia Mobile Number List Map of Affections, awarded the Nadal Prize in It is a story that takes up the classic theme of friendship and betrayal, without whose action this state cannot be valued in its proper measure, in such a way that without Death, life itself, would be meaningless because it is the complementary other side. Inés Santa Cruz is a Mexican poet who teaches a creative writing course in the United States, where it seems that everyone wants to write and no one wants to read, and she arrives at the Student Residence with the intention of teaching a poetry workshop and investigating the archive of Joaquín Amigo, who maintained a certain friendly relationship with Lorca in those years and of whom he learned of its existence because the Residence had attached the news of the discovery in a press release.
Amigo was also shot in the civil war and while Inés consults those archives, the memory of her relationships with Sabino Viñuela comes to her strongly, which for Santa Cruz had the strength and ecstasy of those of Hernán Cortés and Malinche: “I spend the life visiting cathedrals, playing sacred music throughout Central Europe. I am the spirit of Bach remastered and with twenty extra kilos. You, on the other hand, my Malinche, are beautiful. What's your secret? It had been a long time since they had called her Malinche. The year they met at the Student Residence, Sabino had just read The Labyrinth of Solitude by Octavio Paz and was enthusiastic about the chapter titled “The Children of Malinche,” where the Mexican poet developed his theory about the symbolic existence of woman as mother and traitor. Sabino, as soon as he had confidence in Inés, baptized her with the name that the Mexicans gave to the first female interpreter in history.