Sebastià Juan Arbó

Sebastià Juan Arbó (Catalan pronunciation: [səβəstiˈa ʒuˈan ərˈβo]) (1902-1984) was a Catalan novelist and playwright. He wrote in Catalan and Spanish. He was born in San Carlos de la Rapita on October 28, 1902 and died in Barcelona on January 2, 1984. His work includes novels, drama, biographies and translations. He was an honorary member of the Association of Writers in the Catalan Language. In 1948 he won the Premio Nadal (the Nadal Prize).

Note that "Arbó" is not his surname. "Juan" is his first surname. See Spanish naming customs#Forms of address.

Early life

Born into a peasant family, at age eight Arbó moved with his parents to Amposta, and at twelve and worked in an office. In 1927 he went to Barcelona, where he began his writing career as a journalist for La Vanguardia and ABC, as well as on various editorials.

Career

In 1931 Arbó published his first novel, L'futile combat (Useless battle).

In 1932 he published Terres de l'Ebre, his best known work, a novel that describes the situation of the peasants of the Ebro delta, forgotten and humble, working in a hard and thankless land, subject to the fatalities. The novel transforms their personal and community experiences into fiction. In 1933 he published Notes d'un estudiant que va morir boig and in 1935 Boig Camins de nit.

After the Civil War he stopped publishing until, in 1947, he released Tino Costa, with versions in Catalan and Spanish. In 1946 he had, however, published, a biography: Cervantes.

From 1948 he wrote works in Spanish such as Sobre las piedras grises (1948) which won the Nadal Prize for novel, and especially Martin Masks (1959). In his later years he returned to publishing in Catalan: Narracions d'Delta (1965), L'espera (1948) and La Masia (1975).

Arbó died on January 2, 1984 of a heart attack.

Works

Novels

Theatre

Biographies

Awards

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, August 13, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.