South American writers
- GotThatSwing
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South American writers
Have you read any books of South American writers? What do you think about them?
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After reading Glass Castle I was so hyped to read Half Broke Horses, I stole it from a Krogers lol
- El_greco
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Or does she ?

I liked most of the South American authors that i've managed to read, i just simply hate one : Paulo Coelho. His works are just overly simplistic quasy philosophical *ish. Srsly, the dude acts like he's Tolstoy, like nothing existed before him and he primitively tries to evolve philosophical ideas.
- Elphaba
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I also tried to books by Isabel Allende. I liked her book about Haiti, The Island Beneath the Sea, but wasn't too impressed by The House of Spirits, so I didn't go on to other books by her.
I think that's all the south American writers I read that I can remember. I've head a lot about Mario Vargas Llosa. Maybe I'll try him one day.
- GotThatSwing
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Yes, I meant Latin AmericanEl_greco wrote:I think she thinks South America as in Latin America. Not the south of the US.
Or does she ?
I liked most of the South American authors that i've managed to read, i just simply hate one : Paulo Coelho. His works are just overly simplistic quasy philosophical *ish. Srsly, the dude acts like he's Tolstoy, like nothing existed before him and he primitively tries to evolve philosophical ideas.

I actually enjoyed two of Paulo Coelho's books (let's call it my guilty pleasure) but even though I totally agree with you about him. He just throws same 'philosofical' phrases every now and then, and acts like a celebrity

@ Elphaba Do try Mario Vargas Llosa


- Va_treehugger
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Like Water for Chocolate - by Laura Esquivel
The Lonesome Dove Series - by Larry McMurtry (mostly about the old west, but they do slip into Mexico a few times)
Daughter of Fortune - by Isabelle Allende
The House on Mango Street - by Sandra Cisneros (it is set in America, but it is about a Latin American neighborhood)
House on the Lagoon - by Rosario Ferre (a story about a budding novelist)
- kimberly333
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During the first ten years of that window(1974-1984), I read books by Latin American
authors about 75% of the time. Octavio Paz, Pablo Neruda, Carlos Fuentes, Marquez,
and Carlos Casteneda come to mind. There were a lot more than that(I was voracious
and I had lots of time). I read a lot of autographical literature on Mexican leaders like
Juarez, Emiliano Zapata("The land belongs to the man who works it" ), Carranza, Huerta, Montezuma,Hidalgo and Diego Rivera. Latins who write fiction, especially fiction about their country, are very compassionate. Whenever Paz described Mexico,
it was a tough kid who sometimes learned from his mistakes, but most of the time didn't. Mexico was reckless and when the leadership made the mistakes, it went further in debt, a condition that only a few actually addressed. Que pasa?
Un aeroplano paso. Pero no se paro.
- r_parker
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But don't forget about the poets! My favorite Latin American writing is the work of Alejandra Pizarnik, an Argentine poet--very dark and inward-turning poems and books--or that of Marjorie Agosín (especially Starry Night, where she writes from the perspective of Van Gogh as he slips into madness).
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