Dinner at Las Heras is a bittersweet lovesong to a broken world, a geographical and psychological cartography spanning cityscapes and tangled internal terrain. The book is a reference to the first section of Luciana Jazmi¿n Coronado's Catacombs, winner of the Premio Hispanoamericano de la Poesi¿a de San Salvador. In it, each section or "catacomb" is named for an address in Buenos Aires where the poet spent a fragment of her childhood. From Las Heras 3847 (where she lived with her father and stepmother), to Arengreen 1347 (her grandparents' and mother's home), to Calle Cero (or "Zero Street,"…mehr
Dinner at Las Heras is a bittersweet lovesong to a broken world, a geographical and psychological cartography spanning cityscapes and tangled internal terrain. The book is a reference to the first section of Luciana Jazmi¿n Coronado's Catacombs, winner of the Premio Hispanoamericano de la Poesi¿a de San Salvador. In it, each section or "catacomb" is named for an address in Buenos Aires where the poet spent a fragment of her childhood. From Las Heras 3847 (where she lived with her father and stepmother), to Arengreen 1347 (her grandparents' and mother's home), to Calle Cero (or "Zero Street," where she ends her first relationship and loses her little brother), Catacombs and Dinner at Las Heras are deeply personal explorations of past and present. With both real and metaphorical needle and thread, Coronado creates a tapestry from Las Heras that is dystopian yet optimistic, where children raise themselves and sprout from the rubble of adult disillusionment. Here, the dead are never dead, gardens speak, and ravenous flowers wait under the dinner table.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Luciana Jazmín Coronado was born in Buenos Aires in 1991 and holds a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Buenos Aires. She has published three books of poetry, La insolación/Sunstroke (Viajero Insomne, 2014), Catacumbas/Catacombs (Valparaíso, 2016), winner of the First San Salvador Prize for Hispano-American Poetry, and Los hijos Imperfectos/Imperfect Children (RIL, 2023). She has been awarded artists grants from the Antonio Gala Foundation for Young Creators (Córdoba, Spain, 2017) and the Writers Residency from UNESCO and University of Granada (Granada, Spain, 2019), among others. Her poems have been translated into several languages, and published in international anthologies and literary journals. She currently lives in Tarragona, Spain.
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