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The Guadalajara International Book Fair, better known as the FIL (from its Spanish name: Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara) is the largest book fair in the Americas, and second-largest book fair in the world after Frankfurt's. It is also considered the most important cultural annual event of its kind in the Spanish-speaking world. [1]
Amado Nervo was born in Tepic, Nayarit in 1870. His father died when Nervo was 5 years old. Two more deaths were to mark his life: the suicide of his brother Luis, who was also a poet, and the death of his wife Ana Cecilia Luisa Dailliez, just 10 years after marriage.
Eduardo Alfredo Sacheri (born 13 December 1967 in Castelar) [2] is an Argentine writer and professor of History, graduated in the National University of Luján.He is best known for his novel La pregunta de sus ojos which became the basis for the Oscar-winning film El secreto de sus ojos and its American remake.
The Franz Mayer Museum (Spanish: Museo Franz Mayer), in Mexico City opened in 1986 to house, display and maintain Latin America’s largest collection of decorative arts. . The collection was amassed by stockbroker and financial professional Franz Mayer, who collected fine artworks, books, furniture, ceramics, textiles and many other types of decorative items over fifty years of his l
Central Library of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) is the main library in the Ciudad Universitaria Campus. [1] It holds one of the largest collections in Mexico . It has a multidisciplinary approach for all the university courses from the adjacent faculties.
La que no podía amar (The Woman Who Couldn't Love [1]) is a Mexican telenovela produced by José Alberto Castro for Televisa and aired on Canal de las Estrellas from August 1, 2011 to March 18, 2012. [2] [3] Ximena Suárez wrote the script based on the original story by Delia Fiallo.
Zamora was born in San Luis La Herradura, El Salvador [1] and illegally immigrated to the United States at the age of nine, [2] joining his parents in California. [3] [4] His work surrounds borderland politics and race and how migration and civil war has affected him and his family.
Polanco is a neighborhood in the Miguel Hidalgo borough of Mexico City.Polanco is an affluent colonia, noted for its luxury shopping along Presidente Masaryk Avenue, the most expensive street in Mexico, [1] as well as for the numerous prominent cultural institutions located within the neighborhood.