Manuel Rivas
Writer
Born: October 24, 1957 (68 years old)
Place of birth: A Coruña, A Coruña, Galicia, Spain
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Manuel Rivas (born in A Coruña, Spain on 24 October 1957) is a Galician writer, poet and journalist. He began his career in some Spanish newspapers like El Ideal Gallego, La Voz de Galicia, El País, and was the sub-editor of Diario 16 in Galicia. Rivas has written well known poems, novels, articles and literature essays. Rivas is considered a revolutionary in contemporary Galician literature. He was a founding member of Greenpeace Spain, and played an important role during the Prestige oil spill near the Galician coast. Some of his work has been adapted to cinema, such as A lingua das bolboretas and O Lápis do Carpinteiro. Rivas's book Qué me quieres, amor? (1996), a series of sixteen short stories, was adapted by director José Luis Cuerda for his film A lingua das bolboretas ("Butterfly"). O lápis do carpinteiro ("The Carpenter's Pencil") has been published in nine countries and is the most widely translated work in the history of Galician literature.
Filmography (7)
- Butterfly (1999, ★ 7.3)
- Unauthorized Living (2018, ★ 7.2)
- El lápiz del carpintero (2003, ★ 5.7)
- The Patriarch (2023, ★ 6.4)
- Listening to Judge Garzón (2011, ★ 3.8)
- Todo es silencio (2012, ★ 4.3)
- With Good Reason (2004, ★ 4.5)