Connie Spenuzza
Connie Spenuzza | |
---|---|
Born | Quito, Ecuador | September 29, 1953
Pen name | Cecilia Velástegui |
Occupation | Author |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | University of Southern California |
Website | |
conniespenuzza |
Connie Spenuzza (born September 29, 1953) is an American author who lives in Dana Point, California also known under her pen name Cecilia Velástegui, she has been collected by libraries.[1]
Early life and education
Spenuzza was born in Quito, Ecuador.[2] She graduated from University of Southern California with a master's degree in 1977.[3]
Career
Her first novel, Gathering the Indigo Maidens (2011),[4] was a finalist for the Mariposa Prize. Her second novel, Traces of Bliss (2012), was selected to the National Latino Book Club by the Association of American Publishers and the Las Comadres international organization.[5] Her third novel, Missing in Machu Picchu (2013),[6] was awarded first place in adventure fiction by the International Latino Book Awards,[7] but was given an unfavorable review by Publishers Weekly.[8]
In 2014 her novel Parisian Promises received a positive review from US Review of Books.[9]
Spenuzza has been invited as an author panelist at Literary Orange, the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, the Big Orange Book, and the Los Angeles Zoo.
Spenuzza also writes children’s bilingual fables.[10] Olinguito Speaks Up-Olinguito alza la voz (2013)[11] received first place for Best Latino Focused Children’s Picture Book by the 2014 International Latino Book Awards.[12]
In 2018 her novel Lucia Zarate: the Odyssey of the World’s Smallest Woman (2017) received first place in fiction from the San Francisco Book Festival.[13] This novel was selected as a 2017 FOREWORD Indies Book Finalist in multicultural fiction.[14]
In 2019, Jubilant Journeys received 2nd Place in Most Inspirational category of the International Latino Book Awards.[15] The first place went to José Andrés, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee and a James Beard Humanitarian Award Winner.[16]
In 2023, Chocolate Runs Through My Veins, was awarded runner-up for first place by the London Book Festival.[17] Spenuzza was then invited as the keynote speaker to the annual lecture sponsored by the Newport Beach California Library Foundation on June 25, 2023. [18]
Books
- Velástegui, Cecilia (2011). Gathering the Indigo Maidens. Libros Pub. ISBN 978-0983745815.
- Velástegui, Cecilia (2012). Traces of Bliss. Libros Pub. ISBN 978-0983745877.
- Velástegui, Cecilia (2013). Missing in Machu Picchu. Libros Pub. ISBN 978-0985176945.
- Velástegui, Cecilia (2013). Olinguito Speaks Up. Libros Publishing LLC. ISBN 9780985176976.
- Velástegui, Cecilia (2014). Lalo Loves to Help. Libros Publishing Llc. ISBN 9780990671305.
- Velástegui, Cecilia (2015). Parisian Promises. Libros Publishing Llc. ISBN 9780985176914.
- Velástegui, Cecilia (2017). Lucia Zarate: The Odyssey of the World’s Smallest Woman. Libros Publishing Llc. ISBN 9780990671381.
- Spenuzza, Connie (2019). Jubilant Journeys: Experience the Wanderlust Serendipity of a Fifty-Year Journey Across 125 Countries. Libros Publishing. ISBN 9780998703114[19]
- Spenuzza, Connie (29 September 2021). Spanish Colonial Paintings Paired with Engraved Sources. Libros Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9987031-5-2.
- Spenuzza, Connie (14 February 2022). Chocolate Runs Through My Veins: The Insightful History of the Women of Chocolate. Libros Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9987031-6-9.
References
- ^ "Velástegui, Cecilia". worldcat.org. Retrieved November 24, 2016.
- ^ "Cecilia Velástegui, Jetsetter and Author, Discusses Her Writing and 'The Serendipity of the Spanish Tongue'". The Latin Post, Nicole Akoukou Thompson Jun 11, 2015
- ^ "Festival features USC alumni, faculty". Daily Trojan.
- ^ "Local author to sign first novel today at mission". The Orange County Register. 4 October 2011.
- ^ "September 2013 Teleconference: Linda Rodriguez, Cecilia Velástegui". Las Comadres. 30 September 2013.
- ^ Lovitt, Paige. "Book Review: Missing in Machu Picchu by Cecilia Velástegui". Blogcritics.
- ^ "2013 Winners - Las Comadres - Latino Literature". Latino Book Awards.
- ^ "Missing in Machu Picchu ". Publishers Weekly.
- ^ Parisian Promises. US Review of Books, reviewed by John E. Roper in 2014.
- ^ "Festival features USC alumni, faculty". The Daily Trojan. By CARRIE RUTH MOORE, April 13, 2014
- ^ "Olinguito Speaks Up"/ Foreword Reviews, Reviewed by Beth VanHouten February 11, 2014
- ^ "16th Annual International Latino Book Awards 2014 Finalists". Las Comadres - Latino Literature. 27 April 2014.
- ^ "San Francisco Book Festival". www.sanfranciscobookfestival.com. Retrieved 2018-07-11.
- ^ "Full List of 2017 Foreword INDIES Finalists". Retrieved 2018-07-11.
- ^ "International Latino Book Award finalist writes a travel memoir spanning 50 years and 125 countries". Los Angeles Times. 24 July 2019.
- ^ "Dana Point Author Named 'Most Inspirational' Finalist". Dana Point Times. 5 July 2019.
- ^ "** londonbookfestival.com **". www.londonbookfestival.com. Retrieved 2023-09-01.
- ^ "Summer Solstice - Newport Beach Public Library Foundation". nbplf.foundation. Retrieved 2023-09-01.
- ^ "JUBILANT JOURNEYS". Kirkus Reviews.
External links
- Official website
- Interview: Cecilia Velástegui, Author of 'Parisian Promises', Seattle Post-Intelligencer