Showing posts with label Isabel Allende. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Isabel Allende. Show all posts

Sunday, June 16, 2024

Isabel Allende / ‘It would be terrible for the United States, and for humanity, if Trump were to be elected president again’

 

Isabel Allende

Isabel Allende: ‘It would be terrible for the United States, and for humanity, if Trump were to be elected president again’

The Chilean writer has authored her first children’s book: ‘Perla The Mighty Dog.’ In this work, she explores the problem of bullying and the importance of facing our fears. ‘If we face what we fear the most, it turns out that it’s not so terrible,’ she says, during a interview with EL PAÍS

Carlos S. Maldonado

México, 31 May 2024

The prolific Chilean writer Isabel Allende returned to bookstores this week, with her first children’s book: Perla: The Mighty Dog. It’s a story that was born from an everyday event. One day, Allende, 81, had gone out to walk with her little dog, who has the same name as the pet in her book. Perla approached a tree and started barking at a squirrel. Suddenly, a large dog broke off its leash and began to attack her.

Friday, February 11, 2022

Isabel Allende / ‘I have been displaced most of my life’

 

‘I have been displaced most of my life – reading Neruda takes me back to my roots’ … 
Isabel Allende. Photograph: Lori Barra


The 

Books

 0f my 

life


Isabel Allende: ‘I have been displaced most of my life’

The Chilean American author on the allure of Arabian Nights, the inspiration of Gabriel García Márquez and the heartbreak of Jack London


Isabel Allende

Friday 11 February 2022


My earliest reading memory
When I started reading, age five, an uncle gave me a book of Nordic fairytales with illustrations of princesses in furs, bears, ice and snow. I was fascinated. I had never seen snow.

My favourite book growing up
I was 10 when I read (many times) The Call of the Wild by Jack London. The Sled dog Buck’s ordeals broke my heart. I am a crazy animal lover.

The book that changed me as a teenager
Arabian Nights, which I read in the perfect setting of Beirut in the 1950s, hiding in my stepfather’s armoire where he kept (locked up) liquor, cigarettes, chocolates and four leather-bound volumes, which obviously he didn’t want me to read. I found a way of opening the armoire when he was not home and I read the books with a flashlight. Those one thousand and one stories initiated me into eroticism, fantasy and the incurable vice of storytelling.

The writer who changed my mind
I read Eduardo Galeano’s 1971 book Open Veins of Latin America when I was 29. It was the time of the socialist government of Salvador Allende in Chile, when the country was in turmoil. Reading Galeano I became keenly aware of the political and social struggles in Latin America and particularly in Chile. Galeano inspired my politics to this day.

The book that made me want to be a writer
Between 1978 and 1980, while living in exile in Venezuela, I read and reread all the great books of the boom of Latin American literature. I was in my late 30s, had a boring job, my marriage was failing and my kids didn’t need me any more. Those books, especially One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez, made me want to tell the story of my family and my country. I started writing my first novel, The House of the Spirits, as an exercise in nostalgia.

The book I came back to
I could never finish Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes until 2011, when I received the Alcalá de Henares award. That’s the city where supposedly Cervantes was born, and the award is given in his honour.

The book I reread
Complete Works by Pablo Neruda. I have been displaced most of my life. Neruda takes me back to my roots and the landscapes of Chile. Now that I live in English [in the US], I read Neruda every 7 January, the day before I start writing another book. (I start all my books on 8 January.) His words trigger my imagination and enrich my Spanish.

The book I could never read again
In my adolescence I read a few romance novels. I can’t do it now.

The book I discovered later in life
My dictionary of synonyms and rhymes (in Spanish). I had no idea something like that existed, and since 1985 it has been my daily tool for writing.

The book I am currently reading
I am usually reading more than one book at a time. Right now: The Winter Soldier by Daniel Mason and Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr.

 Violeta by Isabel Allende is published by Bloomsbury (£16.99). 


THE GUARDIAN



THE BOOKS OF MY LIFE

2021
The books of my life / Amanda Gorman / ‘I wanted my words to re-sanctify the steps of the Capitol’Mary Beard / ‘Virgil was a radical rap artist of the first century BC’
Stephen King: ‘I loved Lord of the Flies the way kids love Harry Potter’
Gabriel Byrne: ‘I’ve never played Hamlet, but in many ways I am him’
Curtis Sittenfeld / ‘Sweet Valley High is not respected – but I found the books riveting’
Elif Shafak / ‘Reading Orlando was like plunging into a cold but beautifully blue sea’
Jason Reynolds / “Reading rap lyrics made me realise that poetry could be for me”
Michael Rosen / ‘My comfort read? Great Expectations’
Siri Hustvedt / ‘I responded viscerally to De Beauvoir’s The Second Sex’
Alan Garner / ‘The Chronicles of Narnia are atrociously written’
Rose Tremain / ‘My comfort reads are MasterChef cookbooks’
Oliver Jeffers / ‘Catch-22 was the first time I had a physical reaction to a book’
Penelope Lively / ‘Beatrix Potter seemed so exotic, unlike my world of palm trees’


2022
David Baddiel / The book that changed me? John Berger’s Ways of Seeing
David Baddiel / The book that changed me? John Berger’s Ways of Seeing
Edmund White / ‘My earliest reading memory is a lady toad with a nasty temper’
David Mitchell / ‘If I need cheering up, Jamie Oliver’s recipes usually help’
Isabel Allende / ‘I have been displaced most of my life’
Barbara Kingsolver / ‘Middlemarch is about everything, for every person, at every age’


2023
Richard Ford / ‘I don’t read for comfort. Comfort I source elsewhere’
Bret Easton Ellis: ‘I connected with Quentin Tarantino’
Lauren Groff / ‘Virginia Woolf’s Flush is delightfully bananas’
Natalie Haynes / ‘I couldn’t stop reading Stephen King - even at the top of the Eiffel Tower’
Richard Armitage / ‘I used to stand on the Lord of the Rings to reach the top shelf in my wardrobe’

2024
Mieko Kawakami / “Franz Kafka es mi lectura reconfortante”

2025
Niall Williams / ‘When I first read Chekhov, I thought: “He’s not so great”’
Graham Norton / ‘The Bell Jar changed how I felt about books’



Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Isabel allende / I believe in the power of stories

Isabel Allende
I BELIEVE
by Isabel Allende

I write to preserve memory against the erosion of oblivion and to bring people together. I believe in the power of stories.