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Showing results for GABRIEL VARGAS AVILA
...By contrast, Mexican cartel boss Sandra Ávila Beltrán was a third-generation drug trafficker who inspired the TV series Queen of the South....
...She built her early career on Latin American fiction, becoming the voice of Gabriel García Márquez and Mario Vargas Llosa, before cementing her reputation with a highly acclaimed Don Quixote....
...They are less ill-disposed towards Bolsonaro,” says Graziella Testa, a political scientist at the Getulio Vargas Foundation....
...Chilean President Gabriel Boric said the plan to increase state control of lithium is the best chance Chile has to become a “developed economy” and to distribute wealth in a more just way....
...Ricardo Ávila, senior analyst at El Tiempo newspaper, said Petro’s “first priority would be to calm the markets”, his second to seek dialogue with those who did not vote for him, his third to mend fences...
...Yet for Paula Vedoveli, a historian at the Fundação Getúlio Vargas, royal rule will remain a thing of the past in Brazil....
...Gerald Martin’s 2008 biography, Gabriel García Márquez: A Life, was exhaustive, yet the Colombian novelist remains elusive....
...“Brazil’s established parties are not loved but have shown how resilient they are,” said Oliver Stuenkel at the Getulio Vargas Foundation....
...His running mate, Manuela d’Ávila, is from the Communist party of Brazil....
...Vásquez loyally salutes the luminaries of Latin American literature’s golden years — Mario Vargas Llosa, García Márquez, Carlos Fuentes and more....
...Hermès’ first Rio outpost, in a two-storey 1940s house on Rua Garcia D’Avila, has tapped directly into this consumer mood....
...“His appointment was just as important as the result of a presidential election in Brazil,” says Gabriel Petrus, analyst at the consultancy Barral M Jorge Associates in Brasília....
...The gloom is evident in the Getulio Vargas Foundation’s consumer confidence index, which has fallen to new lows in recent months. Ms Rousseff’s approval ratings have shown a similar trajectory....
...And it was here, in the 1960s, that literary agent Carmen Balcells added Gabriel García Márquez, Mario Vargas Llosa and many other great writers to her client list, placing Barcelona at the centre of the...
...The carnage was a foretaste of the industrialised slaughter of the first world war, according to Gerald Martin, the biographer of Gabriel García Márquez and author of Journeys Through the Labyrinth (1989...
...Gabriel García Márquez or Günter Grass. What are you scared of? Not that much, which sort of shows the size of my ego....
...It also helps that Cartagena has been for years the second residence of the iconic Colombian writer and Nobel laureate, Gabriel García Márquez....
...… Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage, by Haruki Murakami, translated by Philip Gabriel, Harvill Secker, RRP£20/ Knopf, RRP$25.95 Years after the title character is told by his closest...
...That position enabled him, together with other literary greats of el boom such as Colombia’s Gabriel García Márquez and Peru’s Mario Vargas Llosa, to reach a global audience....
...Tightly associated with Latin America’s literary boom of the 1960s and 1970s, which included novelists such as Colombia’s Gabriel García Márquez and Peru’s Mario Vargas Llosa, Fuentes was outspoken on a...
...By contrast, Vargas Llosa has continued to protest against all forms of authoritarianism, be that of the left or right....
...In the 1960s, this link led to the emergence of the Latin American “boom” generation that included Colombia’s Gabriel García Márquez and Peru’s Mario Vargas Llosa, who spent many years in Barcelona....
...overlooked by the Nobel Prize committee because of his centre-right political views, which contrast with the leftist positions of notable Latin American authors and poets such as Colombian Nobel laureate Gabriel...
...Like many of his Latin American contemporaries, including Colombia’s Gabriel García Márquez, he was an early supporter of left-wing regimes such as Fidel Castro’s, in Cuba....
...Abroad, economists and businessmen thought Mexico’s emergence as a full democracy would unleash an economic potential held back by a political system that Mario Vargas Llosa, the Peruvian novelist, once...
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