The writer Mancha, Clara Sanchez, has been in this morning, Thursday, February 14, a meeting with the 600 high school students in the auditorium of the UPCT to present What hides your name (Destiny, 2010; Booket 2011). Mandarache Award Finalist for Young Readers, the writer was accompanied during the press conference by the Councillor for Youth, Ruth Collado, and Professor of History of IES Isaac Peral, Florentina Celdran.
Councillor Cartagena has welcomed the visit of the author to Cartagena, said while the present Awards Mandarache Ecuador has reached.
Ten novels published, a contributor to television and columnist for the newspaper El Pais, Clara Sanchez noted for its literary solvency as Florentina Celdran, who has said that this work carries a world youth disturbing, yet fascinating of humans.
The play revolves around two main characters: Sandra and Julian.
The first has decided to retire to a village on the east coast and will be in this place when he meets Julian, a survivor of the death camp of Mauthausen. Intrigue and suspense will open hole with the presence of an elderly couple octogenarians, camouflaged harmless beings turn out to be Nazis.
According to the author, it hides your name appears as a novel impunity, which rescues the need to be alert to manipulation.
And, the scariest monsters they hide behind nice faces, says the author, who has highlighted the quality of reading that has been observed after their encounters with school Cartagena. I love this work in defense of reading because good results and discerning readers, he said.
Perhaps one of his most revealing quotes, since it reflects the spirit in which they are born Mandarache Awards, is that literature should become a daily habit because art is better able to convey the shortcomings and the greatness of the person.
Clara Sanchez has received important awards such as the Alfaguara Prize in 2000 by Latest news of Paradise, or the German Sanchez Ruiperez Award for best article published in 2006 by reading the column entitled Passion Reading (El Pais, August 6).
The author confessed lover of literature since childhood, and chose writing because it is the easiest way to show your feelings.
The author arrived in Cartagena yesterday when met at the university Cajamurcia Foundation and book clubs of municipal libraries, the People's University, the University Senior and UNED.
Also, this morning held a talk with students at IES Juan Sebastian Elcano at 8.15 h.
The writer, who is currently in the promotion of her latest novel Come into my life (Destiny, 2012), is the second of the candidates to visit Cartagena Mandarache after Manuel Rivas activities with last January.
The third finalist candidate Vicente Luis Mora prize, which will visit Cartagena in March.
Source: Ayuntamiento de Cartagena