Rubem Fonseca
Rubem Fonseca (May 11, 1925 – April 15, 2020) was a Brazilian writer.[1][2]
Life and career
He was born in Juiz de Fora, in the state of Minas Gerais, but he lived most of his life in Rio de Janeiro. In 1952, he started his career as a low-level cop and, later became a police commissioner, one of the highest ranks in the civil police of Brazil. Following the steps of American novelist Thomas Pynchon, a close friend of Fonseca, he refused to give interviews and felt strongly about maintaining his privacy.[3]
His stories are dark and gritty, filled with violence and sexual content, and usually set in an urban environment. He claimed a writer should have the courage to show what most people are afraid to say. Authors from the rising generation of Brazilian writers, such as Patrícia Melo or Luiz Ruffato, have stated that Fonseca's writing has influenced their work.[3]
He started his career by writing short stories, while first popular novel was A Grande Arte ("High Art"), followed by Agosto. One recurring character in Fonseca's books is the lawyer-detective Mandrake.[4]
In 2003, he won the Camões Prize, considered to be the most important award in the Portuguese language.
In 2012, he became the first recipient of Chile's Manuel Rojas Ibero-American Narrative Award.[5]
He died in Rio de Janeiro in April 2020 at the age of 94.[6]
Bibliography
Brazilian editions
Novels and novellas
- O Caso Morel (1973)
- A Grande Arte (1983)
- Bufo & Spallanzani (1986)
- Vastas Emoções e Pensamentos Imperfeitos (1988)
- Agosto (1990)
- O Selvagem da Ópera (1994)
- Do Meio do Mundo Prostituto Só Amores Guardei ao Meu Charuto (1997, novella)
- O doente Molière (2000, novella)
- Diário de um Fescenino (2003)
- Mandrake: A Bíblia e a Bengala (2005, novella)
- O Seminarista (2009)
- José (2011)
Short story collections and anthologies
- Os Prisioneiros (1963)
- A Coleira do Cão (1965)
- Lúcia McCartney (1967)
- Feliz Ano Novo (1975)
- O Homem de Fevereiro ou Março (1973)
- O Cobrador (1979)
- Romance Negro e Outras Histórias (1992)
- Contos Reunidos (1994)
- O Buraco na Parede (1995)
- Romance Negro, Feliz Ano Novo e Outras Histórias (1996)
- Histórias de Amor (1997)
- Confraria dos Espadas (1998)
- Secreções, Excreções e Desatinos (2001)
- Pequenas Criaturas (2002)
- 64 Contos de Rubem Fonseca (2004)
- Ela e Outras Mulheres (2006)
- Axilas e Outras Histórias Indecorosas (2011)
- Histórias Curtas (2015)
English translations
- High Art (translation by Ellen Watson, Harper & Row, New York, 1986)
- Bufo & Spallanzani (translation by Clifford E. Landers, Dutton, New York, 1990)
- Vast Emotions and Imperfect Thoughts (translation by Clifford Landers, Ecco Press, New York, 1998)
- The Taker and Other Stories (translation by Clifford E. Landers, Open Letter, New York, 2008)
- Crimes of August (translation by Clifford E. Landers of Agosto, University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst, Mass., 2014)
References
- ^ Wilmington, Michael (October 30, 1991). "MOVIE REVIEW 'Exposure' Settles for Less Than Tantalizing Potential". Los Angeles Times. p. 5. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
There may be something unconsciously premonitory about the fact that the people who've made a movie out of Rubem Fonseca's fascinating Brazilian thriller ...
[dead link] - ^ Polk, James (August 23, 1998). "Blame It on Rio". New York Times. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
- ^ a b Tello Garrido, Romeo. Prólogo en Fonseca Rubem, Los mejores relatos. México: Alfaguara, 1998.
- ^ "Folha Online - Ilustrada - "Mandrake", de Rubem Fonseca, entra na lista dos mais vendidos - 15/08/2005". www1.folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved 2020-09-03.
- ^ García, Javier (28 September 2012). "Fonseca, el policial más duro de Brasil, recibe el premio Manuel Rojas" [Fonseca, the Toughest Policeman in Brazil, Receives the Manuel Rojas Award]. La Tercera (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 September 2018.
- ^ "Morre o escritor Rubem Fonseca aos 94 anos". GaúchaZH. April 15, 2020.
Further reading
Portuguese
- Rubem Fonseca: Proibido e Consagrado / Deonísio da Silva., 1996
- Os Crimes do Texto: Rubem Fonseca e a Ficção Contemporânea / Vera Follain de Figueiredo., 2003
- Acercamientos a Rubem Fonseca / José Bru., 2003
- No Fio do Texto: A Obra de Rubem Fonseca / Maria Antonieta Pereira., 1999
- Roteiro Para um Narrador: Uma Leitura dos Contos de Rubem Fonseca / Ariovaldo José Vidal., 2000
- O Realismo na Ficção de José Cardoso Pires e de Rubem Fonseca / Petar Petrov., 2000
- Literatura e Consumo: O Caso Rubem Fonseca / Ana Cristina Coutinho Viegas., 2002
- "O Mago Artificial", in O Estudante do Coração / Luis Carlos de Morais Junior, 2010
External links
- Writer´s official site
- Short biography, in Portuguese
- Descriptions of Fonseca's books from one distributor, in Portuguese
- Critics, in Spanish
- v
- t
- e
- Angola
- Brazil
- Cape Verde
- East Timor
- Equatorial Guinea
- Guinea Bissau
- Macau
- Mozambique
- Portugal
- São Tomé and Príncipe
- 1989 Miguel Torga
- 1990 João Cabral de Melo Neto
- 1991 José Craveirinha
- 1992 Vergílio Ferreira
- 1993 Rachel de Queiroz
- 1994 Jorge Amado
- 1995 José Saramago
- 1996 Eduardo Lourenço
- 1997 Pepetela
- 1998 Antonio Candido
- 1999 Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen
- 2000 Autran Dourado
- 2001 Eugénio de Andrade
- 2002 Maria Velho da Costa
- 2003 Rubem Fonseca
- 2004 Agustina Bessa-Luís
- 2005 Lygia Fagundes Telles
- 2006 José Luandino Vieira (declined award)
- 2007 António Lobo Antunes
- 2008 João Ubaldo Ribeiro
- 2009 Arménio Vieira
- 2010 Ferreira Gullar
- 2011 Manuel António Pina
- 2012 Dalton Trevisan
- 2013 Mia Couto
- 2014 Alberto da Costa e Silva
- 2015 Hélia Correia
- 2016 Raduan Nassar
- 2017 Manuel Alegre
- 2018 Germano Almeida
- 2019 Chico Buarque
- 2020 Vítor Manuel de Aguiar e Silva
- 2021 Paulina Chiziane
- 2022 Silviano Santiago
- 2023 João Barrento
- 2024 Adélia Prado