Brazil Loses What Many Consider Its Best Contemporary Novelist

Brazilian writer João Ubaldo Ribeiro Brazilian writer João Ubaldo Ribeiro, 73 years old, died today, from pulmonary embolism, at his home in Rio de Janeiro. He was a member of the Brazilian Academy of Letters (ABL), and had held chair number 34 since 1994.

Also a journalist and a political scientist, he penned over 20 books, published in 16 countries. He is also a writer of short-stories, crônicas, and essays.

Among his main works are Sergeant Getúlio (1971), translated into 12 languages, An Invincible Memory (1989) and The Lizard’s Smile (1989).

In 2008, João Ubaldo Ribeiro won the Camões Award, granted by the Portuguese and Brazilian governments to authors who contribute to the richness of the Portuguese language. Sergeant Getúlio and An Invincible Memory earned him the Jabuti Award, from the Brazilian Book Chamber, one of the Brazil’s most prestigious prizes.

The scholar and philologist Evanildo Bechara commented the death of his friend and colleague at the Brazilian Academy of Letters. Bechara said that the ABL was still recovering from the death of academician Ivan Junqueira when it received the sad news of the death of João Ubaldo Ribeiro.

“The ABL, which seeks to be a place for the major exponents of the Brazilian literature, just had a rude blow with the death of João Ubaldo. He was perhaps our greatest expression in prose. He was a man with books that will stay for a long time as representatives of the modern Brazilian literature. He was an educated man, not only a great prose writer, but also a great chronicler and connoisseur of everything. He was a man with a great general culture, which he sprinkled in his articles. He represented Brazil very well, both inside and outside its borders.”

Ubaldo Ribeiro was born in Bahia, but his family moved to Aracaju (Sergipe state), when he was two months old. His father, Manuel Ribeiro, lawyer of renown in the Bahian capital, and also a professor, hired a teacher to give private lessons to his little boy.

He started in journalism in 1957, working as a reporter at Jornal da Bahia. Later he moved to the Tribuna da Bahia, where he would become the editor-in-chief. Along with legendary filmmaker Gláuber Rocha, he edited magazines, newspapers and participated in the student movement at the end of the 1950s.

In 1964, João Ubaldo went to the United States, thanks to a scholarship from the American Embassy to get a masters degree in political science at the University of Southern California.

João Ubaldo Ribeiro was very active till the end of his life, collaborating regularly in O Globo e O Estado de S. Paulo newspapers. He was also a contributor to publications in Germany and Portugal.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Landless Movement Calls World to Action

The 5th World Social Forum, which took place between January 26th and 31st in ...

Probe to Have Access to Illegal Bank Activity in the US by Brazilians

In an official note, Brazil’s Ministry of Justice informed that, on February 23, the ...

How Brazil’s Northeast Fits into Plan of Fueling World with Ethanol

Brazil's plans of introducing ethanol into the global market are bold. And very bold, ...

Ventania Puts Up Over US$ 500 Million for Brazilian Wind Farms

Controlled by the Portuguese company Martifer and the Brazilian Energia Global, the firm Ventania ...

Brazil Keeps Sending Aid to Tsunami Victims

In the next few days, Brazil’s humanitarian aid to the countries victimized by the ...

Brazil and Algeria Urge Israel’s Complete Withdrawal

The South America – Arab Countries Summit “fulfilled its goal of strengthening the interregional ...

Cover Story

There are close to four million computers in Brazil today. But this number might ...

We Made It in Rio

Organized over the Internet, gringo sambistas from 19 countries invaded the Sambadrome in Rio ...

Brazilian Missing and Presumed Kidnapped in Iraq

In an official note released yesterday January 20, the Brazilian construction firm, Norberto Odebrecht, ...

Brazil to Sell Fish to World’s Largest Fish Producer

Brazil may export fish to China and thus extend the market beyond what is ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`