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Este es el futuro que estabas esperando book cover
Este es el futuro que estabas esperando
2013
First Published
4.23
Average Rating
160
Number of Pages

Su poesía tiene el sabor de la crónica urbana, versos irónicos y divertidos, y un tono desenfadado y fresco. Su obra es auténtica y destila un humor ácido. Una manera original de ver la realidad, la ciudad y las situaciones de la vida cotidiana, caracteriza su trabajo. Este libro recoge una selección de los mejores poemas publicados por el autor dominicano en Llegó el fin del mundo a mi barrio, Anoche soñé que era un DJ, Postales y Jarrón. Frank Báez hace parte de los 39 escritores latinoamericanos destacados en Bogotá39-2017. En su poesía conviven un hondo lirismo y un desparpajo adolescente que conquista al lector de inmediato. Debo decir que estamos ante una de las voces más innovadoras, más auténticas y más comunicativas de la poesía latinoamericana de hoy. Que no es casualidad la coincidencia de juicios entusiastas de sus lectores. Que ahora todos nosotros somos testigos de los primeros pasos de un poeta que será, Dios lo proteja, una celebridad en la poesía de nuestro idioma. Darío Jaramillo Agudelo

Avg Rating
4.23
Number of Ratings
61
5 STARS
38%
4 STARS
48%
3 STARS
15%
2 STARS
0%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Frank Báez
Frank Báez
Author · 5 books

Frank Baez might be described as the homegrown Junot Diaz of the Dominican literary scene: a native author rather than a son of the diaspora, but with the same “hip” originality and “with-it” verve. Born in 1978 in Santo Domingo, Baez has made a name for himself in his own country as the Dominican Republic’s most important young poet and short-story writer. His collection of stories, Págales tú a los psicoanalistas [For the Psychoanalysts, You Pick Up the Tab!] (Editorial Ferilibro, Santo Domingo, 2007) won the First Prize for Short Stories at the Santo Domingo Book Fair of 2006. With his fellow poet Homero Pumarol, he founded a “spoken word band” called El Hombrecito, which in 2009 cut a CD called Llegó el hombrecito [The Hombrecito Has Arrived]. He regularly gives readings accompanied by music, and is an amateur DJ. The quality of Frank Baez’s work has already won him an international following as well. His first book, Jarrón y otros poemas, was published in Madrid by Editorial Betania in 2004, and selections from his verse recently appeared in the Latin American anthology Cuerpo plural: Antología de la poesía hispanoamericana contemporánea (Editorial Pre Textos, 2010). His latest poetry collection, Postales, won the National Poetry Prize Salomé Ureña in 2009 as a manuscript, and was published in Costa Rica and Argentina even before it appeared in the Dominican Republic. As editor of the online poetry review Ping Pong, he has published scores of poets from Latin America, North America, and Europe. Highly conversant with the literatures of all three continents, he is a distinguished translator of English and American verse.

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