Xuan Bello Fernán (in Asturian; Bable; Leonese; Asturleonese pronounced as /ˈʃuaŋ ˈbeʎo feɾˈnaŋ/) (born 1965 in Tinéu, Asturias, Spain) is a Spanish poet and one of the best-known contemporary Asturian writers.[1] [2]
Xuan Bello | |
Birth Place: | Tineo, Asturias, Spain |
Birth Date: | 1965 |
Occupation: | Poet, Contemporary writer |
Citizenship: | Spanish |
In 1982, at barely 16 years old, he published his first book of poems in Asturian, Nel cuartu mariellu. His poetic works, apart from those published in university magazines and in Lletres asturianes, continued with El llibru de les cenices (1988), Los nomes de la tierra (1991), El llibru vieyu, with which he won the Teodoro Cuesta prize for poetry in 1993, and Los Caminos Secretos (1996). In 1999 he published a bilingual anthology (asturian-Spanish) of his poetry, with the title La Vida Perdida.
Bello has also done numerous translations, especially of Portuguese authors, and has collaborated on magazines such as Clarín, Adréi and Zimbru, having co-founded the last two with Berta Piñán and Esther Prieto, respectively. He also has been published in the newspapers La Nueva España and El Comercio and the weekly Les Noticies, of which he has been the director since 1997. In 2005 he founded Xunta d'Escritores Asturianos ("Congress of Asturian Writers").
His literary fame outside of the Asturian community came with his Spanish language translation of his own Hestoria Universal de Paniceiros, for which he received the Ramón Gómez de la Serna prize and which was one of the most critically acclaimed Spanish books of 2003.
Bibiana y el so mundu (1989)
Estancu y otros poemes (1989)
El casu raru del dr. Jeckyll y mr. Hyde (1995)
Tres aventures de Sherlock Holmes (1995)
Escuela de melecineros y fábula de varia xente (1997)
Coses (2000)