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Lorenzo Silva

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Image of Lorenzo Silva

Lorenzo Manuel Silva Amador (born 7 June 1966 in Carabanchel, Madrid) is a Spanish award-winning writer. After earning a law degree at the Universidad Complutense of Madrid, he worked as a lawyer from 1992 to 2002.

He has written stories, articles and literary essays, but he is recognised primarily for his novels. One such novel, El alquimista impaciente, won the Nadal Prize in 2000, and filmed by the director Patricia Ferrera, premiering in 2002.[1] This is the second novel in which two of his best known characters, the Guardia Civil agents Sergeant Bevilacqua and Corporal Chamorro, make an appearance. Another of his novels, La flaqueza del bolchevique, was the runner-up for the prize in 1997, and has been adapted into a movie by Manuel Martín Cuenca.[1] The same novel was translated into English in 2013 with the title The Faint-Hearted Bolshevik.[2]

In 2001, Silva conducted an interactive experiment of novel-writing through the website of Círculo de Lectores, in which he proposed for each chapter three possible endings that were put to popular vote. The experiment was a success, and the resulting novel, La isla del fin de la suerte, was published in traditional format.[1]

In October 2012, he was awarded the Premio Planeta de Novela for La Marca del meridiano.[3]

Works

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Novels

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  • Noviembre sin violetas. Celesa. 2003 [1995]. ISBN 978-8423337989.
  • La sustancia interior. Booket. 2004 [1996]. ISBN 978-8423335831.
  • La flaqueza del bolchevique. Destino. 2010 [1997]. ISBN 978-8423342471.
  • El lejano país de los estanques. Destino. 2007 [1998]. ISBN 978-8423339907. First volume in the Bevilacqua series
  • El ángel oculto. Destino. 2004 [1999]. ISBN 978-8423334995.
  • El urinario. Pre-Textos. 1999. ISBN 978-8481912760.
  • El alquimista impaciente. Destino. 2011 [2000]. ISBN 978-8423344260. Second volume in the Bevilacqua series
  • El nombre de los nuestros. Destino. 2001. ISBN 978-8423333073.
  • La isla del fin de la suerte. Destino. 2011 [2001]. ISBN 978-8423343287.
  • La niebla y la doncella. Destino. 2002. ISBN 978-8423334438. Third volume in the Bevilacqua series
  • Carta blanca. Espasa-Calpa. 2002. ISBN 978-8467014105.
  • Nadie vale más que otro: Cuatro asuntos de Bevilacqua. Destino. 2004. ISBN 978-8423336685. Fourth volume in the Bevilacqua series
  • La reina sin espejo. Planeta. 2005. ISBN 978-8423337750. Fifth volume in the Bevilacqua series
  • Muerte en el "reality show". Rey Lear. 2007. ISBN 978-8493553159.
  • El blog del inquisidor. Destino. 2008. ISBN 978-8423340996.
  • La estrategia del agua. Circulo de Lectores. 2010. ISBN 978-8467240511. Sixth volume in the Bevilacqua series
  • Niños feroces. Booket. 2011. ISBN 978-8423327966.
  • La marca del meridiano. Planeta. 2012. Seventh volume in the Bevilacqua series.

Short stories

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Non-fiction

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Children's and young adult fiction

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Honours

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  • La flaqueza del bolchevique - Short-listed for the Premio Nadal, 1997.[3]
  • El lejano país de los estanques - Winner of El Ojo Crítico, 1998.[3]
  • El alquimista impaciente - Winner of the Premio Nadal, 2000.[3]
  • Laura y el corazón de las cosas - Winner of the Premio Destino Infantil-Apel·les Mestres, 2002.[4]
  • Carta blanca - Winner of Premio Primavera de Novela, 2004.[5]
  • Sereno en el peligro - Winner of Premio Algaba de Ensayo, 2010.[4]
  • La marca del meridiano - Winner of Premio Planeta de Novela, 2012.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "De los cuentos a la novela negra". La Razon (in Spanish). EFE. October 15, 2012. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
  2. ^ "Lorenzo Silva vuelca al inglés el mundo degradado de "La flaqueza del bolchevique"". Jul 2, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e Carles Geli (October 16, 2012). "Los guardias civiles de Lorenzo Silva ganan el Planeta". El País (in Spanish). Barcelona. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
  4. ^ a b "Silva, un Planeta ´negro´ en el universo literario español" (in Spanish). Barcelona. EFE. October 16, 2012. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
  5. ^ Cristina Campo de Pablo (March 2, 2004). "Lorenzo Silva y Eugenia Rico vencedores del Premio Primavera de Novela" (in Spanish). La Semana. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
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