Merce rodoreda biography of martin lawrence
Mercè Rodoreda’s (Barcelona, – Romagna Forest, ) literary production is deeply linked to her biography, marked by significant cultural and political events.
Spanish author. Name variations: Merce Rodoreda. Born in Barcelona, Spain, on October 10, some sources cite ; died in ; married and separated; children: one. As a teenager, she married her mother's brother, with whom she had a child. After separating from her husband, she began writing, using Catalan rather than Spanish. Rodoreda finished five novels she later disowned four of them, retaining only the Crexells prizewinning Aloma [] and a number of short stories in the mids.
The Spanish Civil War interrupted her writing and her life. A supporter of the socialists and the Republic, she fled to France when Francisco Franco and the Nationalists triumphed in In exile, she became the mistress and housekeeper of Joan Armand Obiols, another Catalan writer.
Mercè Rodoreda i Gurguí was a novelist, who wrote in Catalan.
When Obiols, who was married, refused to break with his wife, Rodoreda felt used and betrayed by her own love for him. When the Second World War ended, Rodoreda took up her writing again. She found little pleasure during a visit to Franco-controlled Barcelona and decided to live in exile, first in Paris and later in Geneva.
As with her other writings, it portrayed the failure of human relations, especially between the sexes, in some ways a reflection of her own experiences. At her death in , she left several drafts of another major novel, La Mort e la Primavera. Pope, Randolph D.