Literature 1
Literature 2
Literature 3
Literature 4
Literature 5
100

This Colombian author, a master of magical realism, won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1982 and is best known for his novel One Hundred Years of Solitude.

Gabriel García Márquez

100

This Uruguayan author of Open Veins of Latin America wrote political essays and poetic short stories.  

Eduardo Galeano

100

First Latino to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.

AND (2 Questions, 2 diff answers)

This author is best known for Beka Lamb, a coming-of-age novel that explores post-colonial identity, gender, and political change in Belize during the 1950s.

Oscar Hijuelos


 Zee Edgell

100

This Dominican-American writer is best known for How the García Girls Lost Their Accents.

Julia Alvarez

100

This Afro-Cuban poet celebrated black identity and culture in works like “Balada de los dos abuelos.”

Nicolás Guillén

200

This Chilean poet was the first Latin American woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Gabriela Mistral

200

This Cuban-American author wrote Dreaming in Cuban, which explores family life before and after the Cuban Revolution.

Cristina García

200

This epic poem by Alonso de Ercilla tells the story of the Spanish conquest of Chile.

La Araucana

200

This Peruvian author uses multiple narrative voices to critique this country’s political corruption in his work Conversation in the Cathedral

Mario Vargas Llosa’s

200

 Dominican poet, writer, named Poet Laureate of the Dominican Republic by congress in 1984, and member of the generation of "Independent poets of the 1940s" in Dominican poetry.

Pedro Mir

300

This Peruvian writer won the Nobel Prize in 2010 and wrote The Time of the Hero.

Mario Vargas Llosa

300

This Mexican novel by Juan Rulfo features a town populated by the dead.

Pedro Páramo

300

In this magical realist novel, Tita communicates emotions through food.

Like Water for Chocolate

300

This U.S. born Chicana poet and scholar wrote Borderlands/La Frontera to explore hybrid identity and language.

Gloria Anzaldúa

300

This 19th-century Cuban author wrote Sab, one of the earliest anti-slavery novels in the Americas.  

Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda

400

This Chilean-American author gained international fame with her debut novel The House of the Spirits and is known for blending historical fiction with magical realism.

Isabel Allende

400

This revolutionary poet from Nicaragua helped introduce Modernismo to Latin American poetry.

Rubén Darío

400

This Mexican nun and poet is considered one of the first feminist writers in the Americas.

Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz

400

This Dominican-American author blends folklore, science fiction, and trauma in The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.

Junot Díaz

400

Salvadoran poet, essayist, journalist, communist activist and intellectual. He is considered one of Latin America's most compelling poets, writing emotional strong works dealing with life, death, love, and politics.

Roque Dalton

500

Known for his lyrical celebration of Salvadoran landscapes and rural life, this poet authored Jícaras Tristes, one of El Salvador’s most beloved poetry collections.

Alfredo Espino

500

This Mexican poet won the Nobel Prize in 1990 and wrote The Labyrinth of Solitude about Mexican identity.

Octavio Paz

500

This Cuban poet and national hero wrote Versos Sencillos, which includes the lyrics to "Guantanamera."

José Martí

500

This Guatemalan author won the Nobel Prize in 1967 for works like El Señor Presidente, which critique dictatorship.

Miguel Ángel Asturias

500

This Puerto Rican poet wrote Puerto Rican Obituary, a searing poem about Nuyorican identity.

AND (Two questions, two diff answers)

This Argentine writer is celebrated for his intricate short stories exploring themes of infinity, mirrors, and labyrinths, especially in collections like Ficciones and El Aleph.

 

Pedro Pietri



Jorge Luis Borges

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