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2006 Guggenheim Fellow
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*''Delirio'' (2004)
*''Delirio'' (2004)


===As a co-author===
=== As a co-author ===


*''Operación Príncipe'' (1988)
*''Operación Príncipe'' (1988)
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*''Otros niños'' (1993)
*''Otros niños'' (1993)


==External links==
== References ==

<references/>

== External links ==
*[http://www.lateral-ed.es/revista/articulos/067_068lrestepo_mdes.html 2000 Interview in lateral] (in Spanish)
*[http://www.lateral-ed.es/revista/articulos/067_068lrestepo_mdes.html 2000 Interview in lateral] (in Spanish)
*[http://www.bombsite.com/restrepo/restrepo.html 2001 Interview] in [[BOMB Magazine]]
*[http://www.bombsite.com/restrepo/restrepo.html 2001 Interview] in [[BOMB Magazine]]
*[http://www.pbs.org/now/transcript/transcript_restrepo.html 2002 Interview] on [[NOW with Bill Moyers]]
*[http://www.pbs.org/now/transcript/transcript_restrepo.html 2002 Interview] on [[NOW with Bill Moyers]]

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[[Category:Colombian people]]
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Revision as of 18:52, 3 January 2009

Laura Restrepo
File:Laura Restrepo.jpg
OccupationNovelist
GenreFiction

Laura Restrepo is a Colombian writer. She was born in Bogotá in 1950. She graduated from the University of the Andes with a degree in Philosophy and Literature and afterwards completed postgraduate work in Political science. In the 1960s Restrepo gave up her teaching post at the National University to focus on left wing politics, and spent time in Spain and Argentina where she was part of the underground resistance.

In 1983, she served as a member of the commission that neogiated for peace with the guerrilla movement M-19. Her first book, Historia de un entusiasmo (1986), relates the inability of the government and rebels to come to terms. This led to her self-imposed exile to Spain and Mexico until 1989 when the M-19 agreed to disarm. She treats themes of exile in her first novel, Isla de pasión, which is based on historical events at Clipperton Island.

Her third novel Dulce compañía (translated into English as The Angel of Galilea) won the Mexican Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize In 2004 she was named the director of the Institute of Culture and Tourism in Bogotá, but resigned soon afterwards after receiving the Alfaguara Prize for her novel Delirio.

She was the recipient of a 2006 Guggenheim fellowship.[1]

Works

  • Story of a Fascination (1986)
  • Isle of Passion (1989)
  • Las vacas comen espaguetis (1989) (for children)
  • Leopard in the Sun (1993)
  • The Angel of Galilea (1995)
  • The Dark Bride (1999)
  • A Tale of the Dispossessed (2001)
  • Olor a rosas invisibles (2002)
  • Delirio (2004)

As a co-author

  • Operación Príncipe (1988)
  • En qué momento se jodió Medellín (1991)
  • Del amor y del fuego (1991)
  • Otros niños (1993)

References

  1. ^ "Guggenheim Foundation 2006 Fellows". John Simon Guggenheim Foundation. 2006. Retrieved 2008-11-10.