Libro de Manuel
Libro de Manuel is a novel by Julio Cortázar, first published in 1973. It was later translated into English by Gregory Rabassa and published in the US as A Manual for Manuel.
Cortázar's only explicitly political novel, it was written as a direct response to the escalating political repression and violence in Argentina and elsewhere in Latin America. Though it received the Medici Award, it received a generally lukewarm critical reception and was described by the author himself as "the worst of my books." Describing the unfolding of a plot to kidnap a Latin American diplomat, it incorporates into the text a number of news articles reproduced from contemporary newspaper accounts of the political situation in Latin America. Cortázar directed that all the royalties from the book be used to provide assistance to the victims of political repression.[1]
External links
- Postmodernist Collage and Montage in Julio Cortázar's Libro de Manuel. Article by Santiago Juan-Navarro.
References
- ^ Herráez, Miguel. Julio Cortázar, Una Biografía Revisada. Alrevés, 2011 ISBN 9788415098034 pp. 282-285
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- The Winners
- Hopscotch
- 62: A Model Kit
- Libro de Manuel
- Bestiario
- "Casa Tomada"
- Final del juego
- Las armas secretas
- Historias de cronopios y de famas
- Todos los fuegos el fuego
- Octaedro
- Blow-up and Other Stories
- Queremos tanto a Glenda
- "Orientation of Cats"
- Around the Day in Eighty Worlds
- Último round
- Prosa del Observatorio
- Fantomas contra los vampiros multinacionales
- Los autonautas de la cosmopista
- Cronopio
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