Fernando Butazzoni (born 1953) is a Uruguayan novelist and journalist. Translated into a dozen languages, he is winner of many international awards for literature and cinema. In 1979, at the age of 25, he won the Casa de las Américas Literature Award.[1] The Mexican writer and screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga described his work as "A pretty fucking powerful look at the relationship between life and death".[2]
Career
His first novel, The open night, was awarded by the Confederation of Universities of Central America with the Latin American Narrative Award EDUCA, in 1981. His works have been translated into English,[3]French,[4] Portuguese, Swedish, Italian,[5]Rumanian[6]Russian[7] and others languages.
In the Columbia Guide to the Latin America Novel... (2007), Raymond Williams wrote about his novel Prince of death: "Is a vast historical work set in nineteenth century". Alexandra Falek, in her thesis The Fiction of Afterwards(New York University, 2007), emphasized that the Butazzoni's work is "an example of testimonial fiction".[8]
In 2009, director José Ramón Novoa filmed his novel "A distant place".[9] The film starred Erich Wildpret and Marcela Kloosterboer.
The film God's Slave (2013), written by Fernando Butazzoni, directed by Joel Novoa, has won several international film awards (in Huelva, Santa Barbara,[10] Lleida, among others).[11] The film was described as "riveting" by Anath White.[12]
In 2014, Planeta Group published "Ashes of Condor", an extensive report about terrorism in Latin America. The Uruguayan Book Chamber granted it the Bartolomé Hidalgo Award 2014 during the International Book Fair in Montevideo.[13]
^металл, нас много, trad. de Yuri Vannikov, edited by Joven Guardia, Moscow, 1986
^Falek, Alexandra (January 2009). The fiction of afterwards: 'Mnemonic manifestations' in cultural works from Uruguay (1995--2005) (PhD in Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures thesis). New York University. ProQuest275846152.