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Helen Lane (1921 – August 29, 2004) was an American translator of Spanish, Portuguese, French and Italian language literary works into English.She translated works by numerous important authors including Jorge Amado, Juan Goytisolo, Juan Carlos Onetti, Octavio Paz, Nélida Piñon, Augusto Roa Bastos, Juan José Saer, Luisa Valenzuela, and Mario Vargas Llosa.
The book sold 50,000 copies its first year, [1] and became seminal in the late-20th-century American back-to-the-land movement, [4] putting the Nearings in the national spotlight. [5] The book would sell 170,000 copies [5] and receive translation into five languages. [1] The Nearings gave their royalties to their Social Science Institute. [5]
This is a list of the most translated literary works (including novels, plays, series, collections of poems or short stories, and essays and other forms of literary non-fiction) sorted by the number of languages into which they have been translated.
Helen Russell is an English author, journalist, and speaker based in Denmark. She has written for The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph, The Observer, Stylist, Metro, Grazia, and The Independent. She has published five books, including the bestselling The Year of Living Danishly (2015).
Helen Weaver (June 18, 1931 – April 13, 2021) [1] was an American writer and translator. She translated over fifty books from French. Antonin Artaud: Selected Writings was a Finalist for the National Book Award in translation in 1977. [2] [3] Weaver was the general editor, a contributor and a translator for the Larousse Encyclopedia of ...
The memoir was simultaneously published in Spanish [10] as Mi mundo adorado, with a translation by Eva Ibarzábal, on the Vintage Español imprint. Sotomayor staged an eleven-city book tour to promote her work, [ 9 ] with appearances intermingled with Supreme Court deliberations in Washington and two swearings-in there of Vice President Joe ...
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This House of Grief is a 2014 non-fiction book by Helen Garner. [1] Subtitled "The story of a murder trial", its subject matter is the murder conviction of a man accused of driving his car into a dam resulting in the deaths of his three children in rural Victoria, Australia, and the ensuing trials. [2]