
Eduardo Galeano
Eduardo Galeano, one of the most renowned Latin American writers of the 20th century, was born in 1940 in Montevideo, Uruguay. He began his career in print media by publishing cartoons and chronicles in the magazine "El Sol." In 1961, he became the director of the daily newspaper "Epoca" and the editor-in-chief of the weekly review "Marcha." In 1973, due to his political ideas, he was exiled and sought refuge in Argentina, where he founded the literary magazine "Crisis." Following the 1976 coup, he was forced to leave the country and settled in Spain. In 1985, after the fall of the dictatorship, he returned to Montevideo. His work merges literary narrative with essays, poetry, and chronicles. He authored numerous articles and books about Latin America, among the most notable being: "Su majestad el futbol" ("Soccer in Sun and Shadow," 1968), "Las venas abiertas de America Latina" ("Open Veins of Latin America," 1971), "Cronicas latinoamericanas" ("Latin American Chronicles," 1972), "Dias y noches de amor y de guerra" ("Days and Nights of Love and War," 1978), "La trilogia, Memoria del fuego" ("Memory of Fire Trilogy," 1982-1986), "El libro de los abrazos" ("The Book of Embraces," 1989), "Patas arriba" ("Upside Down," 1998), "El futbol a sol y sombra" ("Soccer in Sun and Shadow," 1995), among others. In 1975 and 1978, he was awarded the prestigious Casa de las Americas Prize, in 1989 the American Book Award for "Memory of Fire" (Washington University, USA), and in 1999 the Cultural Freedom Award from the Lannan Foundation (Santa Fe, USA). He passed away on April 13, 2015, at the age of 74.