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José María de la Concepción Apolinar Vargas Vila Bonilla (June 23, 1860 – May 23, 1933), commonly referred to as José María Vargas Vila, was a Colombian writer and public intellectual. Vargas Vila was an autodidact , who, from an early age, participated in political struggles as a journalist, political agitator, and orator.
The song "Gracias a la vida" was considered as a "humanist hymn" by Chilean music journalist Marisol García. [4] In 2009 the former president Michelle Bachelet expressed her "affection and admiration" for Mercedes Sosa and "Gracias a la vida" with the following phrase: «As you know today, "Gracias a la vida" is a song of ours, but also a universal one.
Juan Gabriel stated that Salas was "the best friend of my life" ("la mejor amiga de mi vida" in Spanish). [31] Nearly a month after his death, the news program Primer Impacto discovered that Juan Gabriel had a fifth child, a son named Luis Alberto Aguilera, living in Las Vegas. The two maintained a long-distance relationship, primarily ...
"Asi es la Vida" is a song by Spanish singer Enrique Iglesias and Argentinian singer María Becerra. It was released by Sony Music Latin on 28 September 2023 as the lead single off Iglesias's twelfth and final album Final (Vol. 2) (2024). [1] The song was produced by Carlos Paucar and mastered by Randy Merrill. [2]
Antonio Fernández Resines was born 'by accident' on 7 August 1954 in Torrelavega, as his parents spent their Summer holidays there, but he was raised in Madrid, [4] [5] [6] son of José Ramón Fernández Quevedo, lawyer, and Amalia Resines Ruiz de Rebolledo, who died on 10 July 2011. [7]
Julio Cortázar. La biografía. Mario Goloboff, 1998; La mirada recíproca: estudios sobre los últimos cuentos de Julio Cortázar. Peter Fröhlicher, 1995; Hacia Cortázar: aproximaciones a su obra. Jaime Alazraki, 1994; Julio Cortázar: mundos y modos. Saúl Yurkiévich, 1994; Tiempo sagrado y tiempo profano en Borges y Cortázar. Zheyla ...
Fabio Fiallo, in full Fabio Federico Fiallo Cabral (February 3, 1866 – August 29, 1942) was a Dominican Republic writer, poet, politician, and diplomat, primarily known for his modernist short stories and verses, as well as being an outspoken anti-imperialist during the American occupation of 1916–1924.
The story revealed some of future trademark features of Castella's prose: romantic threads discussed against the background of moral obligations. In the spring of 1936 as “Concepción Castellá” [28] she published a short novel Campana la de la Vela; [29] evoking a Granadan romantic legend, [30] it explored dilemmas of the local well-off. [31]