
José Lezama Lima (December 19, 1910 in Havana, Cuba - August 8, 1976 in Havana, Cuba) was a Cuban writer and poet who is considered one of the most influential figures in Latin American literature. Although he only left Cuba on at most two occasions (one trip to Jamaica and a possible trip to Mexico), Lezama's poetry, essays and two novels draw images and ideas from nearly all of the world's cultures and from all historical time periods. The baroque style that he forged relied equally upon his Góngora-influenced syntax and stunning constellations of unlikely images. Lezama Lima's first published work, a long poem called "Muerte de Narciso," released when he was only twenty-seven, made him immediately famous within Cuba and established Lezama's well-wrought style and classical subject matter. In addition to his poems and novels, Lezama wrote many essays on figures of world literature like Mallarmé, Valéry, Góngora and Rimbaud as well as on Latin American baroque asethetics. Most notably the essays published as La expresión americana lay out his vision of the European baroque, its relation to the classical, and of the American baroque.
Books

Esferaimagen
1970

Antología del cuento cubano II
1994

JUEGO DE LAS DECAPITACIONES
1982

La expresión americana
1969

Jose Lezama Lima
Selections
2001

Antología de poesía latinoamericana contemporánea
2010

Antología de la poesía cubana. Tomo I
Siglos XVII - XVIII (Verbum Mayor)
2002

Paradiso
1966

Oppiano Licario
1989

Cuentos
1987

Muerte de Narciso
1988