Rosa Regàs (Barcelona, 1933) is a Spanish writer and novelist.
Contents |
Rosa Regàs was born in Barcelona in 1933. During the Spanish Civil War she was exiled to France, until it ended when she was 6 years old. She was educated at a religious boarding school in Barcelona. She subsequently obtained a Degree in Philosophy at the University of Barcelona, where she met Spanish poets such as José Agustín Goytisolo es:José Agustín Goytisolo, Jaime Gil de Biedma and Gabriel Ferraté.
Her literary training was consolidated between 1964 and 1970 during her work at the legendary publishing house Seix Barral es:Seix Barral, with Carlos Barral. In 1970 she founded the publishing company La Gaya Ciencia and began publishing works by authors who were little known at the time, such as Juan Benet, Álvaro Pombo, María Zambrano, Manuel Vázquez Montalbán and Javier Marías, amongst many others.
After the death of Franco, she launched the publishing house’s first political collection entitled Biblioteca de Divulgación Política, with most of its authors still underground at the time. She also founded and directed a magazine of thought, Cuadernos de la Gaya Ciencia, and another on architecture, Arquitecturas Bis, with the collaboration of professionals of the stature of Oriol Bohigas es:Oriol Bohigas, Óscar Tusquets es:Óscar Tusquets or Rafael Moneo.
Determined to write, she sold her publishing house in 1983 and began working as a part-time translator and editor for different organisations in the United Nations in several different cities around the world, leaving her more free time to dedicate to literature. In 1987 she accepted a proposal from Carlos Trías es:Carlos Trías Sagnier, who was then director of the Ciudades collection at Ediciones Destino es:Ediciones Destino, to write "Ginebra", an entertaining essay on the severe Calvinist capital of Lake Leman and its peculiar inhabitants.
In 1991 she published Memoria de Almator, her first novel, which tells of a woman who is overprotected by her father, her husband and her lover, and ends up taking control of her own life. In 1994 she won the Premio Nadal award for her novel Azul es:Azul (Rosa Regás), a story about love and the ocean which opened the door to the general public for Regàs. Azul was followed by Viaje a la luz del Cham (1995), a narrative about her time in Syria, and Luna Lunera (1999), an autobiographical novel set in Barcelona during the post-war times, for which she won the Ciutat de Barcelona Narrative Award.
In 2001 Regàs won the 50th edition of the Premio Planeta award with her novel of intrigue La Canción de Dorotea, which narrates the discoveries of a molecular biology professor at a country house she inherited from her father. Since then she has published several works, including Diario de una abuela de verano, which was made into a television series of the same title.
Since the early nineties Regàs has been regularly collaborating in newspapers and magazines through her articles, and also carries out significant work as a lecturer and activist in human rights solidarity and defence movements.
Apart from her literary activity, Regàs has also been director of the Ateneo Americano in the Casa de América in Madrid es:Casa de América (1994 – 1998) as well as director general of the Spanish National Library (2004 – 2007).
1994 - Premio Nadal for Azul
1999 - Ciutat de Barcelona Narrative Award for Luna lunera
2001 - Premio Planeta for La canción de Dorotea
- 1st Josep Pla Medal from the Catalan Association of Travel Journalists and Writers (2003)
- Knight of the French Légion d'honneur (2005)
- Saint George’s Cross from the Generalitat de Catalunya (2005)