Carlos Fonseca Suárez
Carlos Fonseca | |
---|---|
Born | San José, Costa Rica | February 19, 1987
Occupation | Author |
Nationality | Costa Rican / American |
Education | Stanford University (BA) Princeton University (PhD) |
Period | 2015–present |
Carlos Fonseca Suárez (born 1987, in San José, Costa Rica) is a Costa Rican-Puerto Rican writer and academic. He is the author of the novels Colonel Lágrimas,[1] Museo animal,[2] and Austral[3]. In 2016, he was selected by the Guadalajara International Book Fair as one of the top twenty Latin American authors born in the eighties.[4] In 2017, he was selected by the Hay Festival as one of the top thirty-nine Latin American authors under forty.[5] In 2021, he was selected by Granta Magazine as one of their Best Young Spanish-Language Novelists.[6] He was also chosen by Encyclopædia Britannica as part of their Young Shapers of the Future 20 Under 40 Initiative, as one of the top twenty young international authors.[7]
Biography
[edit]Fonseca Suárez was born in San José, Costa Rica in 1987. Born to a Costa Rican father and a Puerto Rican mother, he spent most of his adolescence in Puerto Rico.[8]
After attending high school at Colegio San Ignacio in Puerto Rico, he attended Stanford University where in 2009 he graduated with a degree in Comparative Literature. He then attended Princeton University where he obtained a PhD.
He is currently Assistant Professor in Postcolonial Latin American Literature and Culture at the University of Cambridge, as well as Fellow of Trinity College. He lives in Cambridge, United Kingdom with his family.
Works
[edit]Colonel Lágrimas
His first novel, Colonel Lágrimas, published in Spain and Latin America by Anagrama[9] and in English by Restless Books,[10] received critical acclaim and was praised by The Guardian as a “dazzling debut” and by Valerie Miles, in The New York Times Book Review as a “gorgeous opera prima”[11][12][13] Loosely based on the life story of the eccentric mathematician Alexander Grothendieck, it tells the story of a man attempting to compose a total encyclopaedia.
Natural History
His second novel was published in Spain and Latin America by Anagrama as Museo animal, and in English (translated by Megan McDowell) by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. The New York Times, writing about the novel, said that “its plotting and Delphic aura suggest the paranoiac glitter of Don DeLillo, the cosmopolitan dread of Roberto Bolaño and the imaginative elasticity of Ricardo Piglia.”[14] Kirkus Reviews, in a Starred review, described it as "an elegant meditation on art, inconstancy, and hiding, with a deftly woven subtext of camouflage that emerges as the narrative progresses."[15]
Austral
His third novel was published in Spain and Latin America by Anagrama as Austral, and in English (translated by Megan McDowell) by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (US) and MacLehose Press (UK). It was described by the Spanish Newspaper El Mundo as “a brilliant inquiry in the archive of memory.” [16]
La Lucidez del Miope
He is also the author of a book of essays, where he writes about the works of writers that have inspired him like Ricardo Piglia, W.G. Sebald, Roberto Bolaño, Marta Aponte Alsina, and Enrique Vila-Matas. This book won the Premio Nacional Aquileo J. Echevarría, Costa Rica’s National Prize of Literature, in the Essay Category.[17]
Awards
[edit]• Premio Nacional Aquileo J. Echevarría for La Lucidez del Miope
• Granta Magazine’s Best Spanish-Language Novelists, 2021
• Hay Festival’s Bogotá 39 Selection, 2017
• Encyclopædia Britannica’s Young Shapers of the Future, 2020
Bibliography
[edit]• Coronel Lágrimas (Anagrama, 2015). Translated by Megan McDowell as Colonel Lágrimas (Restless Books, 2016)
• Museo animal (Anagrama, 2017). Translated by Megan McDowell as Natural History (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2020)
• La Lucidez del Miope (Editorial Germinal, 2017)
• Austral (Anagrama, 2022). Translated by Megan McDowell as Austral (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2023 and MacLehose Press, 2023)
See also
[edit]
References
[edit]- ^ "Colonel Lágrimas". Restless Books. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ "Museo animal". Editorial Anagrama (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ "Austral - Editorial Anagrama". Editorial Anagrama (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2022-07-20.
- ^ Reina, Elena (2016-11-28). "La FIL de Guadalajara celebra 30 años como la capital literaria de América Latina". EL PAÍS (in Spanish). Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ "Hay Festival Announces Bogotá39-2017 Anthology's Latin American Authors". Publishing Perspectives. 2017-05-08. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ Jones, Sam (7 April 2021). "Granta names world's best young Spanish-language writers". The Guardian.
- ^ "20 Under 40: Young Shapers of the Future (Literature)". Britannica.
- ^ "Carlos Fonseca & The Liberated Novel – Electric Literature". Electric Literature. 2016-10-04. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ "Coronel Lágrimas - Editorial Anagrama". Editorial Anagrama (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ "Colonel Lágrimas". Restless Books. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ "Carlos Fonseca & The Liberated Novel – Electric Literature". Electric Literature. 2016-10-04. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ Suárez, Carlos Fonseca (2016-09-27). "Translation Tuesday: Colonel Lágrimas by Carlos Fonseca – extract". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ Miles, Valerie (2016-12-09). "Literatura". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ Illingworth, Dustin (August 11, 2020). "Boundary-Pushing Books for Fans of Narrative Experiments". The New York Times.
- ^ "NATURAL HISTORY". Kirkus Reviews. April 13, 2020.
- ^ Ma Iglesia, Anna (May 27, 2022). "Una brillante indagación en la memoria" (PDF). El Mundo.
- ^ Díaz Zeledón, Natalia (31 January 2018). "Dónde comprar libros de los escritores ganadores de Premios Nacionales 2017". La Nación.