Jorge Reyes

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Contents

[edit] Early life

Jorge (Ivan) Reyes (b. 1971) is a Cuban-born American author known for authoring books in several genres. He is an honor graduate (1993) of Barry University, from which he has a B.A. in history, a B.S in political science, and a minor in literature concentrating mostly on philosophy's influence on values as represented in literature.

Jorge Reyes in 2004.
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Jorge Reyes in 2004.

[edit] Early life

Born in Santiago de Cuba, Reyes left Cuba with his parents via Costa Rica, before settling permanently in Miami in 1982.

[edit] Part I: Writing

Reyes has written books in several genres of literature: biography, fiction, non-fiction, comedy, children's books, poetry.

Most of what is known about Reyes's childhood was penned down by Reyes himself in his most successful book yet, Rediscovering Cuba: A Personal Memoir, published in 2001.

Rediscovering Cuba: A Personal Memoir.
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Rediscovering Cuba: A Personal Memoir.

In it, he talks about his childhood days in a small town called Boniato. The book itself was prompted by a family emergency that prompted Reyes, his mother and an aunt to revisit the country they had left behind almost twenty years before. The book's thematic format, not auto-biographical in itself, was highly influenced by the literary school known as Magical Realism, but which Reyes used effectively to expound real life experiences. Reyes's method of choosing to write his Cuban memoirs displayed some advanced writing skills, mainly:

1) The ability to utilize a wide array of genres to create an eclectic and unique writing skill; 2) The ability to write in multiple genres almost on a simultaneous basis- jumping from memoirs to poetry to kids' books to short-stories, but to name a few.

In 2002, Reyes addressed the 2002 Miami International Book Fair giving a lecture on Cuban literature. Almost within months, in 2003, Reyes surprised his readership by publishing, among other things, a book of poems titled, My Words Mean Something, which didn't seem to please the critics nor his fans.

My Words Mean Something.
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My Words Mean Something.

However, what this book demonstrated was Reyes's ability to write in a totally different voice from what was expected and, in fact, deconstruct what is expected of a writer's voice. Similarly, this collection included poems that were highly minimalistic in structure and at the same time highly compressed in form, maximizing each word with multiple meanings.

The next few years Reyes slowed down a seemingly prolific writing career, halting unexplicably the publication of some books slated for publication, "Caramelo's Dream". No explanation has been given to account for Reyes's sudden halt in his writings after 2003, though it seems that he was actively trying to mature into the craft and art of writing while seeking new literary interests, concentrating mostly on the essay format to expound, again, on a variety of subject-matters, mainly art and politics, and refreshingly readable for their eclectic conclusions, if not his confrontational style.

Finally, in 2005, after more than four years since a major publication, a long-promised book of poems Day's Night, written in 2003, was announced to be publication in 2006.

Day's Night is a collection of poems about "a self-examined look at a love affair gone sour," done with illustrations made by the reclusive artist Neith Nevelson. The Reyes/Nevelson duo was described as one of the strangest cooperations in literary history, but one which, nonetheless, seems to have pleased some if pre-publication reviews are any indication of a book's worth.

[edit] Part II: Other Interests

Though born into a Catholic family, Reyes has written strongly against religion, while at the same time he's professed feeling torn between "the agnostic's way", or as he calls it, the simultaneous guilt between theism and atheism. Early in his college days, Jorge Reyes was remotely associated with the American Atheists Organization, founded by the famed atheist activist, Madalyn Murray O'Hair (b.1911-1995?). O'Hair's untimely abduction and murder in 1995 cancelled Reyes's association with American Atheists, Inc., which included a book translation into English from Spanish, plus a variety of other publication documents.

Jorge Reyes, (left), at a 2004 book reading during a question-and-answer session
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Jorge Reyes, (left), at a 2004 book reading during a question-and-answer session

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Reyes lives in South Florida.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Forthcoming Books

  • Day's Night," with Neith Nevelson (Illustrator) (2006)
  • City Hall is Murder (2006)
  • Caramelo's Dream (2007)
  • Rape: simply a story (2007)

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

[edit] Blogs