Antonio Soler (novelist)


Antonio Soler is a Spanish novelist, screenwriter and journalist.

Biography

Soler launched his career as a writer in 1992 with the publication of Extranjeros en la noche , a collection of short stories and a novella – La noche , which was later published as a separate book. In 1983 he won the Jauja prize for short stories with Muerte canina .
After a further two novels he published Las bailarinas muertas , winning the Premio Herralde and establishing his reputation as a key exponent of modern Spanish narrative. His following novel, El nombre que ahora digo , is considered by some as one of the best depictions of life in the Republican sector during the Spanish conflict. In an article in El Pais in 2014, Professor Paul Preston is quoted as saying, "I don’t like reading novels about the Civil War, but an exception was El nombre que ahora digo, written by Antonio Soler some twenty years ago, which blew me away.” He has repeated the sentiment more recently in seminars at the Cañada Blanch Centre, commenting that it is one of the few novels to capture the sense of confusion and disorder prevailing during the siege of Madrid.
El camino de los Ingleses , published in 2004, was made into a film in 2006 by Antonio Banderas using Soler's own filmscript.
Soler was writer in residence at Dickinson College, Pennsylvania, and has given courses and lectures at numerous universities and cultural institutions in Europe, Latin America, the US and Canada. He is a founder member of the Order of Finnegans, a literary group created in honour of James Joyce's novel Ulysses, which takes its name from a pub in Dalkey, Ireland. The other four founding members are Eduardo Lago, Jordi Soler, Enrique Vila-Matas and Malcolm Otero Barral.

Short stories

Several of his novels have been translated into a number of languages, including German, Greek, French, Italian, Portuguese, Rumanian, Lithuanian, Croatian and Korean.