Alfonso Chase
Alfonso Chase (born 1944) is a contemporary Costa Rican author.
Biography
[edit]Alfonso Chase was born in Cartago, Costa Rica in 1944.[1] He was educated in Costa Rica, Mexico, Venezuela and the United States, and he began his career in poetry in 1965.[1] He has received numerous awards for his writing, including the Premio Nacional de Poesía twice (1967 and 1995), the Premio Nacional de la Novela (1968) and the Premio Nacional de Cuento (1975); he has also been awarded the Premio Carmen Lyra, de Literatura Infantil y Juvenil for children's literature (1978). As well as representing Costa Rica in several international committees, he founded the Department of Publications of Costa Rica's Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports in 1970. He has worked at the Universidad Nacional in Heredia since 1974,[1] and was named Fulbright Scholar in Residence at the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville in the United States in 1991–1992.
Bibliography
[edit]- Los reinos de mi mundo (poetry, 1966)
- Arbol del tiempo (poetry, 1967)
- Los juegos furtivos (novel, 1967)
- Cuerpos (poetry, 1972)
- Las puertas de la noche (novel, 1974)
- El libro de la patria (poetry, 1975)
- Mirar con inocencia (short story, 1975)
- Los poes sobre la tierra (poetry, 1978)
- Fábula de fábulas (children's story, 1979)
- El tigre luminoso (poetry 1983)
- La pajarita de papel (children's poetry, 1985)
- Entre el ojo y la noche (poetry, 1991)
- Ella usaba bikini (short story, 1991)
- Historias del Tigre de Agua y el Colibrí de Fuego (children's story, 1992)
- El hombre que se quedó adentro del sueño (short story, 1994)
- Jardines de asfalto (poetry, 1995)
- El pavo real y la mariposa (novel, 1996)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Alfonso Chase". Editorial Costa Rica. Archived from the original on 19 June 2010. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
- 1944 births
- Living people
- Costa Rican male short story writers
- Costa Rican short story writers
- Costa Rican male essayists
- Costa Rican essayists
- Costa Rican literary critics
- 20th-century Costa Rican poets
- Costa Rican male poets
- People from Cartago Province
- 20th-century male writers
- Costa Rican LGBTQ writers
- Central American writer stubs
- Costa Rican people stubs
- North American poet stubs