Gerardo Fernandez Fe
This article contains translated text and the factual accuracy of the translation should be checked by someone fluent in Spanish and English. |
Gerardo Fernández Fe | |
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Born | Havana, Cuba | January 15, 1971
Occupation | Novelist |
Language | Spanish |
Genre | Literary fiction |
Gerardo Fernandez Fe (Havana, January 15, 1971) is a Cuban novelist and essayist. His best-known works are the novels La Falacia (1999) and El último día del estornino (2011) and the books of essays Cuerpo a diario (2007) and Notas al total (2015).[1]
His poems, written between 1990 and 2001, were compiled in Tibisial (2017).
In 2018, his essay Moleskine Sergio Pitol was published in Mexico. José Kozer: tajante y definitivo, an extensive interview with the laureate Cuban poet, was published in 2020. Fernandez self-published his novel Hotel Singapur on Amazon in January 2021.
History
Fernandez Fe graduated of French Language at University of Havana in 1995. He has worked as translator and professor of French in Cuba and in Ecuador. He has translated into Spanish the works of Roland Barthes, Gilles Deleuze, Antonin Artaud, Emil Cioran and Denis Roche, among others authors.
In 1990, with 19 years, he won the poetry prize Luis Rogelio Nogueras in Havana with his first book El llanto del escriba, published two years afterwards. It was followed by Relicarios (1994) and Las palabras pedestres (1996). The latter won the David prize of poetry of the previous year.
Fernandez Fe wrote his first novella, La Falacia, in 1996. “A work of deep anxiety and odd maturity… (…)", according to the Cuban writer and Leonardo Padura."It is an indisputable sign that a new narrator has born in Cuba (…).”.[2] The novella received an honorable mention in the Contest Italo Calvino, of which Padura was one of the jurors.
The book of essay Cuerpo a diario (2007) is a curious panorama on diaries written in extreme situations like war, illness or living in totalitarian states.
In the 2011 he published El último día del estornino. For the critic Jeff Lawrence, this book marks "the insertion of Fernández Fe in an important current of contemporary Latin American writers like Ricardo Piglia, Roberto Bolaño, and Juan Villoro".[3]
Rafael Rojas thinks that in this novel there is "a multiple invention of writing, text, authorship and reader, trying to destabilize the poetic traditions of the Cuban literature of the last half century"[4]
Fernandez Fe resides in the United States since 2013.
Of his book Notas al total, published in 2015, the Cuban critic Gilberto Padilla Cárdenas has said: "Notas al total was probably the best book published by a Cuban writer in the year 2015. GFF Is in the Hall of the Fame of the Cuban essay (...) While the others age, GFF rejuvenates with a literature (...) that reads like a battle of other genres -journalism, history, testimony, etc.- against the nirvana of the traditional forms."[5]
In the prologue of Hotel Singapur (2021), Cuban novelist Abilio Estévez says that the novel "highlights what La Falacia and El último día del estornino seemed to make quite clear: Gerardo Fernández Fe is already one of the essential Cuban writers born after 1959".
Fernández Fe has collaborated with Diario de Cuba, El Nuevo Herald, Letras Libres, Cuadernos Hispanoamericanos and Hypermedia Magazine, among others.
Books published
- Hotel Singapur, (novel) Audere Libros, 2021
- José Kozer: tajante y definitivo (interview), Editorial Rialta, Mexico, 2020
- Moleskine Sergio Pitol (essay), Editorial Rialta, Mexico, 2018
- Tibisial (poetry compilation), Editorial Rialta, Mexico, 2017
- Notas al total (essays, interviews, chronicles) Publishing House Bokeh, Leiden, Netherlands, 2015.
- El último día del estornino (novel) Editorial Viento Sur, Madrid, Spain, 2011.
- Cuerpo a diario (essay), Tse-tsé ediciones, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 2007 and Publishing Association Hypermedia, Madrid, 2014.
- La Falacia (novella), Ediciones UNION, Havana, 1999, and Bokeh, Antwerp, Belgium, 2012.
- Las palabras pedestres (poetry), ediciones UNION, Havana, 1996.
- El llanto del escriba, (poetry), Ediciones Extramuros, Havana, 1992.
Distinctions
- Honorable mention in the Contest Juan Rulfo of Essays 2002, sponsored by Radio France Internationale (RFI) for the essay Un escritor de novelas llamado Roland Bathes (A writer of novels called Roland Barthes)
- La Falacia (The fallacy) was awarded with an honorable mention in the Contest Italo Calvino, sponsored by Cuba's Union of Writers and Arci Nuova Associazione, of Italy, in 1997.
- Poetry prize of the magazine La Gaceta de Cuba, 1997.[6]
- David prize of poetry, Havana, 1995, for Las palabras pedestres (The pedestrian words).
- Poetry prize Luis Rogelio Nogueras, Havana, 1990, for El llanto del escriba (The crying of the scribe)
References
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-09-14. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Leonardo Padura Fuentes: “De La Falacia y sus alrededores”, nota a La Falacia, Ediciones UNION, 1999.
- ^ Reseña de Jeff Lawrence en su sitio web www.elroommate.com/2013/01/25/jeff-lawrence-resena-a-gerardo-fernandez-fe-cuba/
- ^ Rafael Rojas: Prólogo a El último día del estornino (notas para una novela), Editorial Viento Sur.
- ^ Gilberto Padilla Cárdenas: Notas al total, OnCuba magazine, 4 de noviembre de 2015
- ^ Poemas premiados por La Gaceta de Cuba en 1997
External links
- Blog of Gerardo Fernández Fe (in Spanish)
- La flema y la fibra of Fernández Fé. Article by [Manuel Álvarez].
- "Las vidas de los otros" (The lives of others), review of Hotel Singapur by Carlos Espinosa Domínguez.
- Gerardo Fernández Fé: singular poeta, story-writer and essayist. Article by Ariel Sangalo.
- Regreso de un novelista. Review of Roberto Madrigal on El último día del estornino.
- El último día del estornino. Review of Benito Garrido
- Prólogo a una novela of Gerardo Fernández Fé. Review of Rafael Rojas.
- Cuban essayists
- Male essayists
- Cuban male novelists
- Cuban translators
- 20th-century translators
- 20th-century Cuban novelists
- 21st-century translators
- 21st-century Cuban novelists
- 20th-century Cuban poets
- Cuban male poets
- 21st-century Cuban poets
- Writers from Havana
- University of Havana alumni
- 1971 births
- Living people
- 20th-century essayists
- 21st-century essayists
- 20th-century male writers
- 21st-century male writers