David Unger (author)
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (November 2013) |
David Unger | |
---|---|
Born | 6 November 1950 |
Nationality | Guatemalan |
Occupation | Author and translator |
David Unger (born 6 November 1950) is a Guatemalan author and translator.[citation needed]
Early life[]
He was born on November 6, 1950 in Guatemala City. In 1955, he immigrated to Hialeah, Florida with his parents.[citation needed]
Unger graduated from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst with a B.A. and received an MFA in 1975 from Columbia University.[citation needed]
Career[]
Unger teaches at the City College of New York and is the International Rep for the Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara.[citation needed] In 2014 he was awarded Guatemala's prestigious Miguel Angel Asturias National Literature Prize for lifetime achievement. He is the author of Moley Mole/Topo Pecoso (Greenseed Publishing, 2021); Sleeping With the Light On (Groundwood Books, 2020); Vivir en el maldito tropico (F y G Editores, 2016); The Mastermind (Akashic Books, 2016; Planeta Mexico: 2015, Polish, Arabic, Italian, Macedonian, Turkish, etc.),Para mi, eres divina (Guatemala: Editorial Cultura, 2014); La Casita: Forgetting Spanish (Mexico: CIDCLI, 2014),El precio de la fuga (Guatemala: F y G Editores, 2013), La Casita (Mexico: CIDCLI, 2012), The Price of Escape (New York: Akashic Books, 2011), Para mi, eres divina (Mexico: Random House Mondadori, 2011), Ni chicha, ni limonada (F y G Editores, 2009, 2019; Recorded Books, 2010), Life in the Damn Tropics (Wisconsin University Press, 2004), which has been published in Spanish (Mexico: Random House, 2004) and Chinese (Taipei: Locus Publishers, 2006), and Neither Caterpillar Nor Butterfly (New York: Es Que Somos Muy Pobres Press, 1985). He has translated more than a dozen books, including three books by Guatemalan Rigoberta Menchu (Groundwood Books), two books by Cuban Teresa Cardenas (Groundwood Books), The Love You Promised Me by Mexican Silvia Molina (Curbstone Press), First Love by Mexican Elena Garro (Curbstone Press) and The Dead Leaves by Mexican Barbara Jacobs (Curbstone Press). In 2019 he will publish his translation of Stories We Were Never Told (PenguinRandomHouse).He is the editor and the main translator of Nicanor Parra's Antipoems: New and Selected (New Directions), the most complete collection of this important Chilean poet, and contributed to Enrique Lihn's The Dark Room (New York: New Directions, 1978) and Roque Dalton's Short Hours of the Night (Willimantic: Curbstone Press). Though he writes in English, he is considered among Guatemala's most important living writers.[citation needed].
Personal life[]
Unger lives in Brooklyn, New York with his wife the artist Anne Gilman.[citation needed]
External links[]
- [1] Entrevista el 26 de abril 2018 en Santo Domingo
- [2] Upon receiving Guatemala's Miguel Angel Asturias National Prize for lifetime achievement
- David Unger, "Ghostwriting Gabo" (Gabriel García Márquez), Guernica 2007
Interviews with David Unger
- [3]
- Angel Elías, "El escritor David Unger habla tras recibir galardón literario", Prensa libre 2014
- Nathalie Handal, "The City and the Writer: In Guatemala City with David Unger", Words without Borders blog 2014
- Nathalie Dittombé, "Entrevista del mes con: David Unger" (Proust Questionnaire), Goethe-Institut Zentralamerika blog 2014
- "David Unger: Voy a seguir nutriéndome de Guate", Siglo.21 2010
Articles about David Unger
- American translators
- City College of New York faculty
- Columbia University School of the Arts alumni
- Guatemalan Jews
- Guatemalan male writers
- Guatemalan emigrants to the United States
- People from Guatemala City
- University of Massachusetts Amherst alumni
- 1950 births
- Living people
- Jewish American novelists
- Spanish–English translators
- American male novelists
- 20th-century American novelists
- 20th-century American male writers
- Novelists from New York (state)