Francisco Umbral Explained

Francisco Umbral
Birth Name:Francisco Alejandro Pérez Martínez
Birth Date:11 May 1932
Birth Place:Madrid, Spain
Death Place:Madrid, Spain
Occupation:journalist
Language:Spanish
Nationality:Spanish
Genre:novelist
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Francisco Alejandro Pérez Martínez (11 May 1932[1] – 28 August 2007), better known as Francisco Umbral, was a Spanish journalist, novelist, biographer and essayist.

Style

Although he was born in Madrid, a city that has inspired most of his work, his early years were spent in Valladolid. His mother travelled to Madrid for his birth, because he was an illegitimate child. His mother's indifference and distance from him left him with an enduring sadness, as did the death of his only son at the age of six, which caused him to write his saddest and most personal book, Mortal y rosa (A Mortal Spring). This fostered a characteristic bitter and stiff outlook in the author, devoid of hopefulness, absolutely submerged in literature, which has provoked many controversies and hostilities.

In Valladolid, he began his journalistic career at El Norte de Castilla, under the tutorship of Miguel Delibes. In 1961, he went to Madrid as a correspondent for said newspaper and quickly became a prestigious reporter and columnist in magazines such as La Estafeta Literaria, Mundo Hispánico and Interviú, and in influential newspapers such as Ya and ABC, although he is best known for his writings for the daily newspapers El País (founded in 1976 just after the death of the Spanish dictator Francisco Franco and the restoration of constitutionalism and democracy) and El Mundo (founded 1990). At El País, he was one of the reporters who was best able to describe the countercultural movement known as La Movida, but his literary quality undoubtedly came from his creative fecundity, his linguistic sensibility and the extreme originality of his style: very careful and complex, creative in its syntax, very metaphorically developed and flexible, abundant in neologisms and intertextual allusions; in sum, of a demanding lyric and aesthetic quality. He exercised a type of anti-bourgeois criticism of customs and manners, without renouncing the most intensely romantic ego, and, in the words of Novalis, having the intent of giving the dignity of the unknown to everyday life, impregnating it with a desolate tenderness. As a political reporter, Umbral was a highly trenchant writer. Having become a successful journalist and writer, he worked with Spain's most varied and influential magazines and newspapers. Among the many published volumes of his articles, the following stand out:

Among non-readers, he is remembered by an appearance in Mercedes Milá's TV program Queremos saber in Antena 3 TV (1993). After some conversation, Umbral interrupted the conversation claiming that he had come to talk about his then latest book, La década roja, not to entertain the presenter.[2]

Work

Narratives

Highlights of his very extensive narrative production, in which autobiographical aspects stand out, include:

In 1985, Umbral began a series of novels about the most important events in the history of twentieth-century Spain, after the fashion of the Episodios nacionales of Benito Pérez Galdós for the nineteenth century.

Essays

He also wrote a set of very personal essays, under such titles as:

His preoccupation with slang is shown by:

Biographies and autobiographies

He also published biographical and literary essays presenting original views about classical authors of the 19th and 20th centuries, such as:

Other biographies are more revealing:

Although autobiography is also present throughout his journalistic work, several of his works are explicitly autobiographical:

Honours and awards

References

  1. Caballé, Anna: Francisco Umbral. El frío de una vida, Espasa-Calpe, 2004, p.69. .
  2. http://www.elmundo.es/papel/2007/08/29/cultura/2188269.html «¡Yo he venido aquí a hablar de mi libro!»
  3. News: Francisco Umbral gana el segundo Premio Fernando Lara con una novela sobre el mal . Francisco Umbral Wins the Second Fernando Lara Award with a Novel About Evil . Rosa . Mora . . Seville . Spanish . 13 September 1997 . 5 September 2018.

External links