Benito Lynch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Benito Lynch, Argentine novelist and short-story writer, was born in Buenos Aires on 25 July 1885, and died La Plata, Buenos Aires Province, 23 December 1951.


[edit] Origins and life

He came from a family of Irish origin, settled on the Río de la Plata region since the XVIII Century. He spent his childhood and adolescence in his grandfather's, Ventura Lynch, large country estate. After the estate was sold, the family settled in La Plata, newly-built capital the Buenos Aires Province. Lynch was a life-long recluse à la Emily Dickinson, living all his life with two unmarried sisters in a large old house in La Plata.

An excentric, Lynch's quirky short stories, (he wrote more than a hundred) in a neo-gauchoesque manner that sometimes evokes magic realism, have been often filmed and dramatised. He also strikes a genuinely and authentically popular vein.

He was also a sport fan. He played football (soccer) in 1901. He played in the first organized match recorded in La Plata. He was a member of oldest club in La Plata, Club de Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata, and he played the first game ever organized by the club that is currently the oldest club in America (founded in 1887) that practice professional soccer.

[edit] Works

  • Plata dorada (1909)
  • Los caranchos de la Florida (1916)
  • Raquela (1918)
  • Las mal calladas (1923)
  • El romance de un gaucho (1923)
  • El inglés de los güesos (1924
  • El antojo de la patrona (1925)
  • Palo verde (1925)
  • De los campos porteños (1931)

Many stories, some worthy of anthologizing, remain uncollected. They appeared in newspapers and reviews of the time such as La Nación, El Hogar, Mundo Argentino, Caras y Caretas and Leoplán.

[edit] References

  • Callet-Bois, J: La novela rural de Benito Lynch with bibliography, A. Sonol, Ed. La Plata, D.D.L., 1960
In other languages