Jose-Pacheco-Obituary

Jose Emilio Pacheco

1939 - 2014

Obituary

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Jose Emilio Pacheco, widely regarded as one of Mexico's foremost poets and short story writers, died Sunday at age 74, the country's National Council for Culture and the Arts announced on its official Twitter account.

President Enrique Pena Nieto also mourned Pacheco with his own tweet after Pacheco's daughter confirmed the death to local journalists.

The poet, novelist, journalist, essayist and literary critic came to be seen as a leading representative of the generation of Mexican writers that came of age in the late 1950s and 1960s.

He was best known for bittersweet accounts of adolescents growing up in a less crowded, but corrupt and unjust Mexico of the 1940s and '50s. He was particularly noted for the 1981 novel "Las Batallas en el Desierto," or "Battles in the Desert," a story of boy's infatuation with the mother of one of his classmates.

Born June 30, 1939, in Mexico City, Pacheco began publishing his writing as a teenager, and in 1957 began publishing the literary magazines "Estaciones" with fellow university students Carlos Monsivais and Sergio Pitol, according to an official biography published when he won the Cervantes Prize, the Spanish-speaking world's highest literary honor. His first collection of stories was published in 1958. He followed with a series of poems and story collections in the 1960s, and became editor of "Culture," one of most important literary publications in Mexico during the 1960s and published a widely praised series of prose and poetry over the next decades.

In 2009, Pacheco won the Cervantes. He was also awarded nearly two dozen other literary prizes from governments and cultural institutions in Mexico and a host of other Spanish-speaking countries.

Jose Antonio Pascual Rodriguez, a member of the Cervantes Prize jury and representative of the Spanish Royal Academy, called Pacheco "an exceptional poet of daily life, with a depth, a fr eedom of thought, an ability to create his own world, an ironic distance from reality when it's necessary, and a linguistic use ... that is impeccable."

Pacheco also taught literature at universities in the United States, Britain and Canada and translated works by Samuel Beckett, Tennessee Williams and T.S. Eliot.

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MICHAEL WEISSEN STEIN Associated Press


Copyright © 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Not sure what to say?

James 4:8 draw close to God and he will draw close to you. Sorry for the loss.

may the God of comfort,comfort you in your time of need..sincere condolence to the family...........

Debabrata Chakrabarti

Sad! People of India will always remember him as a soldier who fought time and again for freedom of expression!

I've always appreciated poetry because it is rarely the work of the shallow mind. And Pacheco chose his words the way a jeweler selects stones -he is one of my favorite poets. You don't have to a genius to appreciate beautiful poetry. The Bible is also has poetry, in just a few lines it conveys emotion. For example, in genesis we can enjoy the blend of utter delight and the feeling of patience rewarded that is captured by Adam's words when Jehovah presented Eve to him in the garden of...

Nada más triste que la pérdida de un ser querido. Anhelamos el día que veamos cumplidas las promesas de Dios como la de Isaías 25:8 :"Él realmente se tragará a la muerte para siempre, y el Señor Soberano Jehová ciertamente limpiará las lágrimas de todo rostro..."

My condolences to the family and friends. May the God who gives peace be with all of you

Trust in the God of comfort.,Psalm 83:18. May the "peace of God" be with you to give you comfort to you at this time.

Sorry for your families loss. May Ecclesiates 7:1 bring you and your family comfort.