José María Álvarez Explained

José María Álvarez (31 May 1942 – 7 July 2024) was a Spanish poet and novelist.

Life and career

José María Álvarez was born in Cartagena, Spain on 31 May 1942. He studied Philosophy and Letters in the University of Murcia, Philosophy in the Sorbonne and subsequently both History and Geography in Spanish universities.

The principal work of Álvarez is Museo de cera (Wax Museum),[1] which was a work in progress for many years due to the author's endeavouring to complete a unique and all-encompassing book (un libro único y totalizador). In the last edition, Álvarez finally brought the cycle to a conclusion.

Álvarez also translated into Spanish the work of, among others, Robert Louis Stevenson, Edgar Allan Poe, Jack London, T.S. Eliot, Shakespeare, François Villon, the complete works of Constantine P. Cavafy, and the poems from the years of madness of Friedrich Hölderlin.

Álvarez followed a number of the trends in contemporary Spanish poetry, passing from socially aware poetry to a culturalism deriving from his life experience. His protagonist is no revolutionary wishing to change lives, but a bon vivant, a disdainer of vulgarity, and a lover of lost causes.

His poems are often bipartite, consisting of an introductory quote (allusions to cinema mythography, theatrical dialogues, fragments of novels, poems, essays, song lyrics, etc.) and the poem itself, which attempts to organise chaos, to explain an incomprehensible world.

Álvarez died on 7 July 2024, at the age of 82.[2]

Bibliography

External links (in Spanish)

Notes and References

  1. Álvarez, José María (Álvarez2002), Museo de cera http://catalogo.bne.es/uhtbin/cgisirsi/AqQ4wQIUQ5/BNMADRID/2703318/9, Seventh Edition, Editorial Renacimiento,,, 879 pp.
  2. https://www.laverdad.es/culturas/muere-anos-poeta-cartagenero-jose-maria-alvarez-20240707205227-nt.html Fallece a los 82 años José María Álvarez, el poeta cartagenero al que amó la vida
  3. Álvarez, José María (Álvarez1999), La lágrima de Ahab, Visor Libros,, 133 pages,
  4. Álvarez, José María (Álvarez2004), Los decorados del olvido, Editorial Renacimiento