Rio Grande Review> Author's Bios

Posted on August 27, 2013 – 14:29

BioNotes & Works

RIO GRANDE Double REVIEW Fall 2012 - Spring 2013. Issue 40-41

Artwork Credits

Edu Barbero (Above image and in print copy RGR), Ruran and Orool Espinal with CreativeCommons License.

Aguirre Dulce Barrera, Alejandro Thornton (Cover) and Amaranta Knight Prado (Back cover).

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SPANISH POETRY

Clock hands that name

Octavio Armand. Born in Guantanamo, Cuba, in 1946.Ha lived for many years in New York, where he founded and directed the legendary magazine Escandalar between 1978 and 1984. He currently resides in Caracas. Collaborating Plural, Vuelta, papers are Armadans Ujule and other Latin American and Spanish magazines. Posted in poetry is not always remoteness Horizon (1970), Entre witnesses (1974), Skin least mine (1976) Things happen (1977), How to write with Hedgehog (1978), Biography for Phaeacians (1980), Origami ( 1987), Son of aus-ence (1999). Some of his essays were collected on Super-surfaces (1980), The Flying Fish (1997), The Breath of the Dragon (2005) and Toy Horizons (2008). Refractions, a selection of poems and essays, translated by Carol Maier, was published by the editorial Lumen Books of New York in 1994.

Welcome home

Artaud Edgar Jarry. Born in Mexico in 1953. Ed-gar Login Altamirano Carmona. Infrarrealista Movement member in the early seventies. Posted in anthologies: Young Poets Assembly of Mexico (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1980) and Time Zero: the higher the sound clips (Peru: Peruvian Culture Publishing Fund, 2009). Book of poetry: Poking his head (Mexico: Edit. Start Pro, 2009). Civil Engineer with Master's and Doctor of Science (Computer Science). She is currently a Full-time researcher at the Autonomous University of Guerrero.

Rio Grande Review. Fall 2012 / Spring 2013

A garden of jasmine to warn who comes

(Cough Change the first flower that again)

Eduardo Espina. Born in Montevideo in 1954. He published books of poetry: Personal Values ​​(1982), The Hunt Bridal (1993, 1997), Gold and the lightness of brightness (1994), Coto de house (1995), read a little slower (1999), Minimum visible world (2003), The cu-tis homeland (2006, 2009). He is also author of the books of essays The disguise of modernity (1992), The ruins of the imaginary (1996), The Milli Vanilli condition. Trials of two centuries (2003), World History of Uruguay (2008) and Julio Herrera y Reissig. No entry for the Uruguayans (2010), the last three published by Editorial Planeta. In 2013 published the books: The ideas until today (essays, Editorial Planeta) and I want to write but I get Espina. Anthology, 1983-2013 (poetry, publishing Mansalva). In Uruguay won twice National Essay Prize and in 1998 won the Municipal Poetry Prize for unpublished book De-slenguaje. About his poetry have been written dissertations, and articles ex-tense study were published in prestigious journals such as Revista Revista Iberoamericana and His-panics Studies. In Santiago, Chile, International Red Book published in 2003 With / configuration syntax: deslenguaje poetry, comprehensive study of the poetry of spine performed by the Spanish linguist Enrique Mallen, also author of the book Poetry lan-guage. From TS Eliot to Eduardo Espina, published by Editorial Aldus in Mexico, 2008. Thorn's poetry is studied at universities in Europe, Latin America, and the United States, and his poems have been partially translated into English, French, Italian, Portuguese, German, Dutch, Albanian and Croatian. It is included in more than 40 anti-pathologies of poetry. In 1980 was the first Uruguayan writer invited to the prestigious International Writing Program at the University of Iowa Since then he lives in America. In 2007, for the book The complexion native, won the Latino Literary Award from the Latin American Writers Institute, established in The City University of New York, and which rewards the best book of the year written in Spanish. In 2011 won a Guggenheim Fellowship.

Source: academics.utep.edu

Poets & Writers Magazine (The top 50 MFA programs, Sept/ Oct 2010)
Book ()

Ifyou

2002-11-11 12:53:03 by havealot

Of talent you can get into any good program. good programs (including iowa's) look primarily at writing. the other stuff helps because it shows that you are interested in really writing for your life. there aren't an awful lot of superior programs in the bay area. i applied to uc davis and got in (i have published in my college magazine only. i went to tufts but majored in biology.)in the end i decided not to go. i think i wanted to go for escapist reasons as well and finally decided that if i wanted to really be escapist i should save up some money (something i can't do while working on an mfa)and run off to russia where i am sure i will write plenty of poetry

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  • Avatar jjhardylover912 Does anyone know of any colleges in the midwest with a good creative writing program?
    Jun 26, 2008 by jjhardylover912 | Posted in Higher Education (University +)

    I live in Wisconsin, and don't want to be too far away from home- but I really want a creative writing major. (By the way, I know that people's majors change a lot and you don't HAVE to know your major as a freshman, so please don't write that :) Thanks).

    • Often schools that offer strong graduate programs in creative writing will also be seen as offering strong undergrad programs as well. That's not always entirely true, but a school with a strong graduate program is probab …ill often translate to the school's undergraduate program (if it offers one), but reputation shouldn't be your only concern. Use those reputations as a starting point, and then evaluate which school seems like a good fit.