José Lins do Rego

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Jose lins 1918.jpg

José Lins do Rego Cavalcanti (July 3, 1901 in Pilar Paraíba - September 12, 1957 in Rio de Janeiro) was a Brazilian novelist most known for his semi-autobiographical "sugarcane cycle." These novels were the basis of films that had distribution in the English speaking world. Along with Graciliano Ramos and Jorge Amado he stands as one of the greatest regionalist writers of Brazil[1] According to Otto Maria Carpeaux, José Lins was "the last of the story tellers".[2] His first novel, Menino de Engenho ("Boy from the plantation"), was published with difficulty, but soon it got praised by the critics.[3]

Novels[edit]

  • Menino de Engenho (1932)
  • Doidinho (1933)
  • Bangüê (1934)
  • O Moleque Ricardo (1935)
  • Usina (1936)
  • Pureza (1937 English; "Purity")
  • Pedra bonita (1938)
  • Riacho doce (1939)
  • Água-mãe (1941)
  • Fogo morto (1943)
  • Eurídice (1947)
  • Cangaceiros (1953)
  • Histórias da velha Totonha (1936)
  • Gordos e magros (1942)
  • Poesia e vida (1945)
  • Homens, seres e coisas (1952)
  • A casa e o homem (1954)
  • Meus verdes anos (1956)
  • Presença do Nordeste na literatura brasileira (1957)
  • O vulcão e a fonte (1958)
  • Dias idos e vividos (1981)

"Mae de todos" (1981)

Films based on his Novels[edit]

  • Pureza, directed by Chianca de Garcia (1940).
  • Plantation Boy, directed by Valter Lima (1965), based on Menino de Engenho novel.
  • The Last Plantation, directed by Marcos Farias (1976), based on Fogo morto novel.

Translations[edit]

The "Academia Brasileira de Letras" points out that several Novels by José Lins do Rego have been translated internationally: Germany, Argentina, Spain, USA, France, England, Italy, Portugal, and Korea.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hafez, 1997, p.13
  2. ^ CARPEAUX, 1980, citado por Hafez, 1997, p.19
  3. ^ Hafez, 1997, p.10

External links[edit]