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Jaime Bayly was in the program Nada Está Said (NED) of RPP and in addition to issues of political conjuncture, personal anecdotes, among others, also had Bayly is the author of more than 15 titles and has received awards as Herralde Novel Prize for "19459007" The Night is Virgin ]. , the Prize Archbishop Juan of San Clemente for & # 39; The last days of the press & # 39; and was a finalist of the Planeta Prize for & # 39; Y Suddenly, An Angel & # 39;
Do not Tell Anyone
Bayly, who emerged at a very young age as one of the most outstanding interviewers in Peru, jumped to 1994 literary celebrity with the publication of Do not Tell Anyone ", a novel that sparked controversy in the local environment to touch During the interview, Bayly recalled the years in which he struggled to get his first book published, not because of problems with publishers, but with his own environment. Family "It was the end of the world war for me, I went against everyone to publish it My brothers, my mother, my uncle Bobby sent me letters to Washington (USA) to ask me not to publish the money. "
To this he added. "I left the TV, a big salary, my apartment, my car, my lovers, the coca, I went to Madrid and then to Washington and I spent all my savings on the novel and I l & rsquo; I have published, give a program never again, you will be a scourge, with AIDS on the street, they said On this scene, he says: "I would not be a writer if I had not dared to publish it. "
Tell no one that it is, says Bayly, among his best novels.A list in which he also places The Last Days of the Press, one of his most famous novels.
Literary Projects
In his dialogue with Renato Cisneros, Bayly talks about two major literary projects, one in development and the other one. other than he hopes to write at some point.
The first is trying to be himself a family portrait and that scale that takes today anytime can not be ended. The provisional title is The Sagrada Familia . "I continue to write it, it's very disproportionate because it has more than 800 pages and I have no way to finish it, intrigues, every family is a guerrilla, this family of ten individuals is a war without neighborhood, there are trenches, factions and conspiracies "commented
" My mother does not want me to publish it and I do not want to read it […] One is a writer and has the right to say what he saw, lived […] I wanted stories to tell, the good thing is that the family is a big story factory and someone must tell them. "
The story of the punch Mario Vargas Llosa gave Gabriel García Márquez in the lobby of the Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico, and that it marked the end of the friendship of the protagonists of the Latin American Boom , it is the other project that obsesses him.
"My dream is to publish the novel about why Mario threw the punch at Gabo, it was in 74 or 76, but it's a big dream, c & rsquo; Is a novel that scares me I want to make a journalistic novel, as reliable as possible of what happened, "he says.
Bayly says that he has several versions of this confrontation, close characters or who knew both writers, both of them the only ones to win the Nobel Prize for Literature of the Boom Generation.
Jaime Bayly is in the country to present his latest novel Pecho Frío at the International Book Fair of Lima. will be held on Saturday July 28th
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