Últimos días de la víctima (novel)
Últimos días de la víctima (English: Last Days of the Victim) is the first novel by Argentine author José Pablo Feinmann. It was published in Spanish in Buenos Aires by Legasa in 1979,[1] 1983[2] and 1987.[3] It was reprinted there by Seix Barral in 1996[3] and 2006,[4] and by Planeta in 2015.[5] It was translated into French by Francois Campo-Timal and published in Paris with the title Les Derniers jours de la victime by Albin Michel in 1991 and by Le Livre de Poche (LGF) in 1993.[6] In 1982, it was adapted into a film also called Últimos días de la víctima. In 1988, it was adapted into the film "Two to Tango", directed by Hector Olivera.[7][8][9][10] This book is a novela negra, the Spanish term for noir fiction.[11] The plot of this novel relates to a contract killer (Raúl Mendizábal) spying on the person (Rodolfo Külpe) he has been paid to kill.
References
- ↑ Google Books
- ↑ Feinman. López Rega, la cara oscura de Perón. Legasa. 1987. Page 6. Google Books
- 1 2 Lockhart, Latin American Mystery Writers,p 84
- ↑ Google Books
- ↑ Google Books
- ↑ Rita de Grandis. Reciclaje cultural y memoria revolucionaria: la práctica polémica de José Pablo Feinmann. Editorial Biblos. 2006. p 227. "José Pablo Feinmann" (1996) Magazine littéraire, issues 339-344, page 50 Google Books. "Albin Michel" (1992) Livres hebdo, volume 14, issues 7-8, page 44 Google Books. "Les Derniers jours de la victime" (1991) Magazine littéraire, issues 284-289, page 93 Google Books. "01286 Feinmann Jose Pablo - Les Derniers jours de la victime" (1993) Livres de France, issues 153-158 Google Books. (1993) Livres hebdo, issues 71-74, pages 35 and 97 Google Books.
- ↑ "Two to Tango", Variety's Film Reviews 1989-1990, volume 21 of Variety's Film Reviews (R R Bowker's Database Publishing Division), 22 February 1989, Google Books
- ↑ Jay Robert Nash and Stanley R Ross. The Motion Picture Guide 1990 Annual: The Films of 1989. Cinebooks. 1990. Page 233. Google Books
- ↑ "Two to Tango". Video Sourcebook. Thomson Gale. Gale / Cengage Learning. 2007. Page 3054. Google Books.
- ↑ (1991) Veja, volume 24, issues 36-44, page 138 Google Books
- ↑ Glen S Close. Contemporary Hispanic Crime Fiction: A Transatlantic Discourse on Urban Violence. Palgrave Macmillan. 2008. Page 109. See also the following pages.
Sources
- Amelia S. Simpson. Detective fiction from Latin America. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. 1990. Pages 39, 54, 60, 61, 139, 141 to 146, 155, 185. Google Books.
- Darrell B. Lockhart (editor). "Jose Pablo Feinman (b 1943)". Latin American Mystery Writers: An A-to-Z Guide. Greenwood Press. 2004. Page 82.
- "La Novela De Feinmann: Una Reflexion Sobre La Violencia" (1981) Crear en la cultura nacional, issues 4-11, p 31; see also passim Google Books
- Ana Maria Zubieta, "La novela negra como fuente" (1983) Revista de la Universidad de México, volume 38 (new series), issue 21, page 43 et seq, Google Books:
- (2004) QueHacer, issues 146-148, page 102
- Giuseppe Petronio, Jorge B Rivera and Luigi Volta. "José Pablo Feinmann". Los héroes "difíciles": la literatura policial en la Argentina y en Italia. Corregidor. 1991. Pp. 143-150. See also page 25. Google Books
- (2001) Revista de crítica literaria latinoamericana, issue 54, page 51 Google Books
- (2001) Semiosis, issue 7, page 55 Google Books