Enrique Serpa (15 July 1900 – 2 December 1968) was a Cuban writer, journalist and photographer born in Havana. His first literary work was Felisa y yo.[1]
He had a long and solid friendship with Ernest Hemingway, who praised his works.[2]
Bibliography
- The honey of the hours (poetry), Havana, 1925.
 - Fantoches, Chapter 9, "The crime of yesterday", Havana, 1933.
 - Felisa and I, Havana, 1937.
 - Contraband (novel), Havana, 1938; Prol. by Denia García Ronda, 1975.
 - Days of Trinidad, Álvarez-Pita Editions, Havana.
 - Vitrina, 1923-1925 (verses), Havana, 1940.
 - America at War, Havana, Arrow Press, 1944.
 - Notes on the novel in the USSR, Havana, Publications of the Institute of the Cuban-Soviet Cultural Exchange, 1946.
 - Presence of Spain, Havana, 1947.
 - Party night, Havana, 1951.
 - The trap (novel), Buenos Aires, 1956; Havana, 1972, 1974.
 - illareñas Conference, Santa Clara, 1962.
 - Shark fins (prose notebooks, 2), Havana, 1963.
 - The heroic manigua, Cuban Letters, Havana, 1978.
 
References
- ↑ Cobb, Martha K. (1972). "Multi-Ethnic Materials in Second Language Programs Classrooms". TESOL Quarterly. 6 (4): 339–349. doi:10.2307/3586162. ISSN 0039-8322.
 - ↑ Feldman, Andrew (2013). "Ernest Hemingway and Enrique Serpa: A Propitious Friendship". The Hemingway Review. 32 (2): 58–76. doi:10.1353/hem.2013.0003. ISSN 1548-4815.
 
External links
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