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         Saramago Jose:     more books (102)
  1. Jose Saramago (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
  2. A paixao segundo Jose Saramago: A paixao do verbo e o verbo da paixao (Ensaio) (Portuguese Edition) by Maria da Conceicao Madruga, 1998
  3. Las pequenas memorias (Memories from My Youth) (Punto De Lectura) (Spanish Edition) by Jose Saramago, 2008-03-06
  4. Small Memories by Jose Saramago, 2011-05-11
  5. Cuadernos de Lanzarote (Spanish Edition) by Jose Saramago, 1999-09
  6. La Caverna (Saramago, Jose. Works.) (Spanish Edition) by Jose Saramago, 2001-01
  7. Jose Saramago: la consistencia de los suenos by Fernando Gomez Aguilera, 2010
  8. (BLINDNESS) BY SARAMAGO, JOSE(Author)Harvest Books[Publisher]Paperback{Blindness} on 02 Sep -2008
  9. Poesía Completa (Spanish Edition) by Jose Saramago, 2005-05-30
  10. Stone Raft, the (Spanish Edition) by Jose Saramago, 1997-08
  11. El Ano de la Muerte de Ricardo Reis (Spanish Edition) by Jose Saramago, 1999-01
  12. Jose Saramago:El amor posible (Colecion Documento) (Spanish Edition) by Juan Arias, 1998-01-01
  13. El Ano de La Muerte de Ricardo Reis (Spanish Edition) by Jose Saramago, 2003-07
  14. El Evangelio Segun Jesucristo (Spanish Edition) by Jose Saramago, 1998-12

41. Nobel Prize Alphabetical
Alphabetical Listing of nobel Laureates 19012000. Click on a link and see theshort biographical notes on this site Sachs, Nelly, 1966. saramago, jose, 1998.
http://literature.school.dk/frame_NobelPrize05.htm
Alphabetical Listing
of Nobel Laureates
Click on a link and see the short biographical notes on this site
Name Year Awarded Agnon, Shmuel Yosef Aleixandre, Vicente Andriic, Ivo Asturias, Miguel Angel ... Yeats, William Butler Click the banner to return to homepage First published December 2000. Last revised 02 dec 2002
amhstamps@adr.dk

42. BBC News | Entertainment | Portuguese Scoops Nobel Literature Prize
on a visit to Chiapas in Mexico jose saramago of Portugal has won the 1998Nobel Prize for Literature, the Swedish Academy announced on Thursday.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/189144.stm

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Thursday, October 8, 1998 Published at 14:56 GMT 15:56 UK
Entertainment
Portuguese scoops Nobel Literature Prize

Saramago speaks to a Zapatista representative on a visit to Chiapas in Mexico
Jose Saramago of Portugal has won the 1998 Nobel Prize for Literature, the Swedish Academy announced on Thursday. Arts corespondent Razia Iqbal: "Saramego joins the illustrious list of Nobel writers" In its commendation, the academy said it had awarded the prize to Mr Saramago "who with parables sustained by imagination, compassion and irony continually enables us once again to apprehend an illusory reality". The works of the 75-year-old novelist and poet, who mixes magical realism with hard-edged political comment, have been translated into 25 languages and he is Portugal's best-known living literary figure. His greatest work is The Stone Raft - published in 1986 - in which he imagined Spain and Portugal breaking off from Europe and floating into the Atlantic. ... BBC Homepage Entertainment Contents Showbiz Music Film Arts ... Reviews Internet Links The Nobel Prize for Literature 1998: Jose Saramago The Swedish Academy The Nobel Foundation The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

43. BBC News | Entertainment | Portuguese Scoops Nobel Literature Prize
Portuguese scoops nobel Literature Prize jose saramago of Portugal has won the1998 nobel Prize for Literature, the Swedish Academy announced on Thursday.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/entertainment/189144.stm
BBC News Online: Entertainment
Front Page World UK UK Politics ... Newyddion Thursday, October 8, 1998 Published at 14:56 GMT 15:56 UK
Portuguese scoops Nobel Literature Prize
Portuguese scoops Nobel Literature Prize
Jose Saramago of Portugal has won the 1998 Nobel Prize for Literature, the Swedish Academy announced on Thursday. In its commendation, the academy said it had awarded the prize to Mr Saramago "who with parables sustained by imagination, compassion and irony continually enables us once again to apprehend an illusory reality". The works of the 75-year-old novelist and poet, who mixes magical realism with hard-edged political comment, have been translated into 25 languages and he is Portugal's best-known living literary figure. His greatest work is The Stone Raft - published in 1986 - in which he imagined Spain and Portugal breaking off from Europe and floating into the Atlantic. He wrote his first novel in 1947 but had to wait some 35 years before winning critical acclaim with works such as the Memorial do Convento about the building of the convent of Mafra outside Lisbon. The book was described by the late Italian film-maker Federico Fellini, a lover of exuberant images, as one of the most interesting he had ever read.

44. Spanish & Portuguese Calendar - Past Events For This Academic Year
400PM until 700PM In Bradley Hall The Department of Spanish and Portuguese invitesyou to join us in welcoming nobel Laureate jose saramago Regents' Lecturer
http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/calendar/0102/spanport.html
You may also wish to view current events
2/20/02 (Wed)
LECTURE POSTPONED! The Arabic 'Maqama' and the Rise of the Modern Novel
In To be announced
This lecture by CMRS Visiting Professor James T. Monroe (Comparative Literature, UC Berkeley)has been postponed. It will be rescheduled during the Spring Quarter. Watch this site for a future announcement. submitted by Karen Burgess (cmrs@humnet.ucla.edu)
2/21/02 (Thur)
REVISED ANNOUNCEMENT - TODAY - "Lyric Matters: The Question of Reference in César Vallejo's Trilce
In 4302 Rolfe Hall
LYRIC MATTERS: THE QUESTION OF REFERENCE IN CÉSAR VALLEJO'S TRILCE to take place TODAY, FEBRUARY 21 at 12:30pm in 4302 Rolfe Hall. Light refershment will be provided. submitted by Benay Furtivo (furtivo@humnet.ucla.edu)
3/11/02 (Mon)
"On the Edge: Envisioning the Libro de buen amor in the Cancionero de Palacio"
until
The UCLA Department of Spanish and Portuguese presents: "On the Edge: Envisioning the Libro de buen amor in the Cancionero de Palacio" Monday, March 11th 2002 3:00 p.m. Lydeen Reading Room, 4302 Rolfe Hall

45. Links To Literature: Jose Saramago
GENERAL RESOURCES. nobel Prize Literature 1998 José saramago. Photo, autobiography,nobel lecture, excerpts from Baltasar and Blimunda, and related links.
http://www.linkstoliterature.com/saramago.htm
LINKS TO LITERATURE HOME LITERATURE NEWSLETTERS SUGGEST-A-SITE BROKEN LINK ... CONTACT NEW! Enter to win a $100 Amazon.com Gift Certificate simply by referring friends to this site! To begin earning entries in the next drawing, please visit our Refer-A-Friend Page GENERAL RESOURCES ONLINE DISCUSSIONS GENERAL RESOURCES Photo, autobiography, nobel lecture, excerpts from Baltasar and Blimunda , and related links. Concise biography and bibliography. ONLINE DISCUSSIONS Message board, with a link to a chat. Saramago Message board and chat. Need a second opinion? Try Search the Web. GoTo Half.com Audible.com Amazon ... eBay

46. Jose Saramago. Biography And Complete Works
HOME. Author saramago, jose, en español Versión en español. Date and Placeof birth b. Nov. saramago was awarded the nobel Prize in 1998.
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Author: Saramago, Jose
Date and Place of birth:
b. Nov. 16, 1922, Ribetejo, Portugal Life and Works:
Portuguese writer, who has combined is his work myths, history of his own country, and surrealistic imagination. Saramago was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1998. He was a good pupil at primary school: in the second class he was writing with no spelling mistakes and the third and fourth classes were done in a single year. Then he was moved up to the grammar school where he stayed two years. For financial reasons he abandoned his high-school studies and trained as a mechanic. In 1947, the year of the birth of his only child, Violante, he published his first book, a novel that he entitled The Widow , but which for editorial reasons appeared as The Land of Sin . He wrote another novel, The Skylight , still unpublished, and started another one, but did not get past the first few pages: its title was to be Honey and Gall, or maybe Louis, son of Tadeus... The matter was settled when he abandoned the project: it was becoming quite clear to him that he had nothing worthwhile to say. For 19 years, till 1966, when he published Possible Poems , a poetry book that marked his return to literature, he was absent from the Portuguese literary scene. After that, in 1970, another book of poems

47. Kuro5hin.org || Blindness, By Jose Saramago
Written by Portuguese author jose saramago, the 1998 winner of the nobel Prize forLiterature, Blindness is a tale that takes us through the depths and heights
http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2001/5/12/15649/2420

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help/FAQ contact links ... MLP We need your support: buy an ad premium membership Blindness, by Jose Saramago Culture
By Driph
Sun May 13th, 2001 at 12:11:59 AM EST
Written by Portuguese author Jose Saramago , the 1998 winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Blindness is a tale that takes us through the depths and heights of humanity. The novel follows a group of nameless strangers, thrown together by misfortune and circumstance, as they attempt to make their way through a world where everyone has gone blind. The short version of this review: Buy this book and read it. ADVERTISEMENT
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ADVERTISEMENT This book paints an unabashed view of the harrowing depths man can reach when desperate and unhindered by society. Life within the mental facility becomes harsh and unsanitary. Fights break out between the quarantined inmates, and factions are formed. The soldiers on the outside, in fear of going blind themselves, do not dare enter, leaving only containers of food at the halfway point between the hospital and the exterior fence, shooting all inmates who happen to stumble beyond that point. Soon, as the soldiers numbers being to dwindle, even the food deliveries cease. The inmates struggle for survival, not knowing whether life goes on outside the guarded fences, or in what form.

48. Portugal Em Linha - Literatura - Jose Saramago - Index.html
Translate this page Escritores Lusófonos. José saramago A notícia da atribuição do nobel daLiteratura 98 a José saramago encheu-nos a todos de orgulho e alegria.
http://www.portugal-linha.pt/literatura/saramago/
Veja aqui o livro de
Leia aqui o
discurso do Nobel 1998

Cronologia
Entrevista
Conversas sobre Saramago
e (talvez) com Saramago

49. Info: Jose Saramago Cree Que Los Traductores Deberian Cobrar Derechos De
jose saramago cree que d/19991110/cultura/saramago.htmJosé saramago cree que jornadas sobre el Premio nobel M. JOSÉ
http://www.xlation.com/mailing-lists/xlat/Nov1999/msg00063.html
Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Thread Index
Info: Jose Saramago cree que los traductores deberian cobrar derechos de autor
http://www.elpais.es/p/d/19991110/cultura/saramago.htm http://www.xlation.com mailto:info@xlation.com

50. JOSE SARAMAGO
Translate this page eso. El Vaticano lamento que le dieran el nobel . a «un recalcitrante comunista».Pero vigilarla. FRAGMENTO DE LA CAVERNA. jose saramago. E1
http://biografias.hypermart.net/jose_saramago.htm
JOSE SARAMAGO FRAGMENTO DE LA CAVERNA POR.ASCANIO CAVALLO Cuando recibió el Nobel dijo que necesitaba un tiempo para acostumbrarse a la idea. ¿Se acostumbró ya? m ío» A esto parece una postura de alguien muy humilde, y no soy tan humilde como a veces se cree, pero tampoco soy orgulloso, c omo otros dicen. Pero llevar a esta edad, sin haber tenido en Algún momento de mi vida la ambición de llegar a esto... Yo he vivido mis días, cada día, en su momento, su hora, su trabajo, su responsabilidad. Como la vida de casi todo el mundo, que nace, vive, crece, trabaja y llega un momento en que se va, sin dejar nada. Podría haber ocurrido eso, sobre todo porque nací en una familia que no tenía nada. Mi madre no sabía leer, mi padre sí, pero no era un águila, y mis primeros libros los compré a los 18 años, aunque había leído muchísimo en las bibliotecas públicas. Por lo tanto, todo en mi vida podía apuntar a algo, pero no al Premio Nobel. ‑De ahí la frase "no he nacido para esto»...

51. JOSE SARAMAGO
Translate this page jose saramago y su discurso hay-muchas-cosas-en-las-que-no-creo, saramagoes un Y lo que pocos escritores el Premio nobel, que obtuvo en 1998
http://biografias.hypermart.net/jose_saramago1.htm
JOSE SARAMAGo José Saramago lo sabe: la ternura en un escritor de 78 años puede ser arrolladoramente seductora. Tal vez por eso hilvana sus ideas sobre cómo ve el mundo sin, por ejemplo, perderle el pulso al microclima de la habitación señorial del hotel señorial que lo aloja en su paso breve por Buenos Aires. "Este asunto del aire acondicionado es cosa seria, no vaya a creer, hay que estar atentos, lo voy a regular: no quiero que se resfríe", comenta. Es sólo una de sus tantas gentilezas. Atrincherado detrás de sus gafas gruesas y su discurso: Saramago es un hombre tierno. Y seductor. Alto, delgado, con una etiqueta sospechosa de pesimista y una valija llena de definiciones sobre política, economía, pobreza y tecnología, tie­ne lo que todo portugués: una caballerosidad que en otros países se considera pasada de moda. Y lo que pocos escritores: el Premio Nobel, que obtuvo en 1998 ‑el primero otorgado a un escritor de lengua portuguesa‑, una distinción que agradeció ante los miembros de la Academia Sueca con un discurso plagado de algunas de sus ideas recurrentes. Esas que lo hicieron ingresar en el lote de escritores "comprometidos", aquellos que participan activamente en la defensa de los más débiles y se suman a las pro­testas frente a las injusticias. Sus cartas a Presidentes y los pedidos de audiencia ante autoridades gubernamentales para manifestar reclamos son tan célebres como la prolífica obra que lo consagró como uno de los mejores narradores de este tiempo.

52. Washingtonpost.com Style Live Books Reading
jose saramago of Portugal won the nobel Prize for Literature yesterday, the ultimateaccolade for this magic realist writer who can chart a plague of blindness
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/books/features/saramagowinsnobel.htm

53. Brazil - BRAZZIL - "Blindness" By Jose Saramago - Brazilian Literature - Book Re
The newest nobel Prize in Literature, Portuguese writer José saramago has The amazingPortuguese writer jose saramago has created another compelling tale in
http://www.brazzil.com/p47oct98.htm
Brazzil
October 1998
Book Review
Nightmare
in White
The newest Nobel Prize in Literature, Portuguese writer José Saramago has just released another book in the U.S. Once again the inimitable Saramago has created a compelling tale. This time a dark one, dealing with a luminous blindness.
Bondo Wyszpolski
Blindness, by José Saramago, trans. by Giovanni Pontiero
(Harcourt Brace, 294 pp., $22) Like most epidemics, it begins simply enough; a man in his car is waiting for the light to change. But before it does, he does. People honk, swear, and none of this helps the man recover his sight: "Nothing, it's as if I were caught in a mist or had fallen into a milky sea. But blindness isn't like that, said the other fellow, they say that blindness is black, Well I see everything white." A luminous whiteness, to be exact. And the blindness spreads, ignoring the logic that "blindness isn't something that can be caught just by a blind man looking at someone who is not, blindness is a private matter between a person and the eyes with which he or she was born." To avert the escalation of this strange phenomenon, the handful of people who have contracted this white sickness, so-called, are rounded up and quarantined in an empty mental hospital. There are two wings, separated by a kind of no man's land, each wing with a courtyard and three wards. There's a core group, and the book (if you'll excuse the pun) will never let them out of sight for very long. These "seven pilgrims" consist of the first blind man, his wife, the doctor who examined the first blind man, the doctor's wife, and three of the doctor's patients—a young woman with dark glasses, a boy with a squint, and an old man with a black eyepatch. If this seems like an odd way to describe characters instead of simply giving them names, it's because this is how the author describes them to us. No one in the book has a proper name.

54. Brazil - BRAZZIL - Short Story - Reviews - Two Books By Jose Saramago - Portugue
published in hardcover last year, presumably to fill the lull between Blindness andAll the Names, and to profit from saramago's receiving the nobel Prize for
http://www.brazzil.com/p25feb01.htm
Brazzil
February 2001
Literature
Lively Monologue
All The Names is for the most part a fascinating story,
somewhat politically surreal. Not only is Senhor José a faceless cog in
the bureaucratic machine, he lives in a simple house that's butted up
against the very archives where he works.
Bondo Wyszpolski All The Names, by José Saramago, translated by Margaret Jull Costa (Harcourt, 238 pp., $24) The labyrinthine storage space of the Central Registry of Births, Marriages and Deaths is so vast and complicated that—after one researcher was lost for a week and nearly given up for dead—the clerks who venture into its depths began using what they called `Ariadne's thread,' a lifeline that helps them find their way out. The huge structure sits in an old city that's never identified. As the author describes it, "the whole building had the air of a ruin fixed in time, as if it had been mummified rather than restored when the dilapidated state of its materials demanded it." In the Central Registry (where, indeed, `all the names' are filed) Senhor José is at the lower end of the pecking order, which is shaped like a triangle: eight clerks, four senior clerks, two deputy registrars, and the Registrar himself. Has Nobel Prize-winning novelist José Saramago (whose books include

55. Review: Blindness By Jose Saramago
disaster. Except the novel I'm describing is Blindness, written byJose saramago, 1998 winner of the nobel Prize for Literature.
http://urchin.earth.li/~sax/sf/reviews/blind.html
Home General Biochemistry SF ... Fiction
Review: Blindness, by Jose Saramago
Without warning, a driver waiting at traffic lights goes blind. A good samaritan takes pity on him, and drives him home to his wife. The next morning, the wife takes her husband to see an optician, who is baffled. That afternoon, the wife goes blind. So does the samaritan. The following morning, the doctor goes blind. Later that day, one by one, the doctor's patients go blind. The contagion spreads through the city. Panicked, the government sets up internment camps, and rounds up the blind. The camps are undermanned and underprovisioned. Thereafter, the situation deteriorates. Standard SF plot, right? Reminiscent of John Wyndham, in fact: total breakdown of society in the face of inexorable disaster. Except the novel I'm describing is Blindness , written by Jose Saramago , 1998 winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature. I first saw Blindness mentioned a couple of years ago, in one of Robert Silverberg's columns for Asimov's . I meant to get hold of a copy - Nobel Prize-winning speculative fiction seeming too good a chance to pass up - but somehow forgot and it was only when a customer came in before christmas to request a copy that I remembered it. That aside, the novel is very good, both as a novel and as science fiction. The breakdown of order, the process of the progression of the blindness - the inevitability of it - is the main thrust of the novel, with the characters doing what they must to survive. In places, the novel is bleak, and brutal; in places, as you might expect from a novel employing a metaphor of such grand power and conception, it is genuinely enlightening. It is never boring, though, even when Saramago is describing the minutiae of life in one of the blind camps, and even when you're struggling through a particularly dense page of exposition and authorial asides directed squarely at the reader. Recommended.

56. Poesía Y Literatura - Premios Nobel De Literatura
Premios nobel de Literatura. Vea en orden alfabético. Año. Nombre. 1997,Fo, Dario. 1998, saramago, jose. 1999, Grass, Günter. 2000, Gao, Xingjian.
http://www.angelfire.com/nj/poesia/prznbly.html
Poesía y Literatura
Creada por Luis Macaya
Inicio
Mundo Literario Librería Regional Poesía del autor ... Mapa del Sitio
Premios Nobel de Literatura
Vea en orden alfabético Nombre Prudhomme, Sully Mommsen, Christian Matthias Theodor Bjornson, Bjornstjerne Martinus Eizaguirre, Jose Echegaray Y Mistral, Frederic Sienkiewicz, Henryk Carducci, Giosue Kipling, Rudyard Eucken, Rudolf Christoph Lagerloef, Selma Ottilia Lovisa Heyse, Paul Johann Ludwig Maeterlinck, Count Maurice Polidore Marie Bernhard Hauptmann, Gerhart Johann Robert Tagore, Rabindranath Rolland, Romain Heidenstam, Carl Gustaf Verner Von Gjellerup, Karl Adolph Pontoppidan, Henrik Spitteler, Carl Friedrich Georg Hamsun, Knut Pedersen France, Anatole Benavente, Jacinto Yeats, William Butler Reymont, Wladyslaw Stanislaw Shaw, George Bernard Deledda, Grazia Bergson, Henri Undset, Sigrid Mann, Thomas Lewis, Sinclair Karlfeldt, Erik Axel Galsworthy, John Bunin, Ivan Alekseyevich Pirandello, Luigi O'neill, Eugene Gladstone Gard, Roger Martin Du Buck, Pearl Sillanpaa, Frans Eemil Jensen, Johannes Vilhelm Mistral, Gabriela

57. Poesía Y Literatura - Premios Nobel De Literatura
Premios nobel de Literatura. Vea en orden alfabético. Año. Nombre. 1997,Fo, Dario. 1998, saramago, jose. 1999, Grass, Günter. 2000, Gao, Xingjian.
http://www.angelfire.com/nj/poesia/prznbl/prznbly.html
Poesía y Literatura
Creada por Luis Macaya
Inicio
Mundo Literario Librería Regional Poesía del autor ... Mapa del Sitio
Premios Nobel de Literatura
Vea en orden alfabético Nombre Prudhomme, Sully Mommsen, Christian Matthias Theodor Bjornson, Bjornstjerne Martinus Eizaguirre, Jose Echegaray Y Mistral, Frederic Sienkiewicz, Henryk Carducci, Giosue Kipling, Rudyard Eucken, Rudolf Christoph Lagerloef, Selma Ottilia Lovisa Heyse, Paul Johann Ludwig Maeterlinck, Count Maurice Polidore Marie Bernhard Hauptmann, Gerhart Johann Robert Tagore, Rabindranath Rolland, Romain Heidenstam, Carl Gustaf Verner Von Gjellerup, Karl Adolph Pontoppidan, Henrik Spitteler, Carl Friedrich Georg Hamsun, Knut Pedersen France, Anatole Benavente, Jacinto Yeats, William Butler Reymont, Wladyslaw Stanislaw Shaw, George Bernard Deledda, Grazia Bergson, Henri Undset, Sigrid Mann, Thomas Lewis, Sinclair Karlfeldt, Erik Axel Galsworthy, John Bunin, Ivan Alekseyevich Pirandello, Luigi O'neill, Eugene Gladstone Gard, Roger Martin Du Buck, Pearl Sillanpaa, Frans Eemil Jensen, Johannes Vilhelm Mistral, Gabriela

58. Gazeta.pl : Czasopisma : Wiedza I ¯ycie
Przeszukaj witryne. Artykul pochodzi z Wiedzy i Zycia nr 4/1999. WIEDZA ICZLOWIEK. nobel '98. LITERATURA. Elzbieta Milewska ROK CHWALY JOSÉ saramago.
http://www.wiedzaizycie.pl/99044600.htm
+ Og³oszenia Gazeta Wyborcza Wiedza i ¯ycie
Poprzednie numery
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Numer 4/2003

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W nastêpnym numerze: > Bogus³aw Wo³oszañski: Sensacje XX wieku

> Sze¶æ tajnych regu³ Bractwa Ró¿okrzy¿a
> Na ³yk tlenu - do lasu czy do baru
> Matematyka t³umaczy g³ód w Chinach > P³yta w prezencie: "Makrokosmos" - jak powstawa³ kinowy przebój Informacje niesprawdzone przestarza³e zbyteczne ... LIGA NAUKOWA Po raz drugi z "Gazet± Wyborcz±" zapraszamy wszystkich czytelników do wspólnej zabawy. Polecamy na forum Komputery Ksi±¿ki Studia Kalendarium 1 kwietnia 1868 Opatem klasztoru w Brnie zosta³ Gregor Mendel. Awans sprawi³, ¿e nie mia³ on ju¿ wiêcej czasu na swe badania z zakresu dziedziczenia. 3 kwietnia 1849 W Pary¿u zmar³ Juliusz S³owacki. 5 kwietnia 1573 W Warszawie oddano do u¿ytku pierwszy sta³y most na Wi¶le. 9 kwietnia 1981 Miesiêcznik "Nature" opublikowa³ najd³u¿sz± w historii nazwê naukow±. S³owo okre¶laj±ce systemow± nazwê DNA zawartego w ludzkich mitochondriach liczy sobie 207 tys. liter, sam za¶ zwi±zek sk³ada siê z 16 569 nukleotydów. 13 kwietnia 1970 Houston, mamy problem - zameldowali na Ziemiê astronauci ze statku Apollo 13, gdy na pok³adzie wybuch³ zbiornik z p³ynnym tlenem.

59. NewStandard: 10/9/98
literature. If anyone deserves the nobel, it's jose saramago, hesaid in a written statement from Brazil. Blindness, saramago's
http://www.s-t.com/daily/10-98/10-09-98/a01wn007.htm
Portuguese writer wins Nobel literature prize
Related article
  • A meeting with an immortal - at the mall By Barry Hatton, Associated Press writer
    LISBON, Portugal Portuguese novelist Jose Saramago, whose exuberant imagination and playfulness have made him popular but whose bluntness sometimes can offend, won the 1998 Nobel Literature Prize yesterday.
    After years of being nominated and not winning, Saramago saw no reason to stick around the book fair in Germany he was attending to wait for the award's announcement.
    Instead, the 75-year-old writer left for the airport, and his publisher caught him five minutes before he was to board his plane. Beaming with pride, he returned to the fair in Frankfurt and graciously answered reporters' questions even those that irked him.
    Asked what he'd do with the $978,000 prize, the tanned and balding man with wispy white hair asked why star athletes are never questioned about what they will do with they money they earn.
    "We are so used to the fact that writers should be poor, so that every time that a writer gets more money than is normal for his day-to-day life, they are asked what they will do with it," said Saramago, the first Portuguese writer to win the Nobel.
    Saramago has never courted the kind of fame offered by literary prizes, and his blunt opinions and atheistic outlook have frequently clashed with the establishment and the general public.
  • 60. Jose Saramago
    Translate this page Portugal. Premio nobel de Literatura 1998, José saramago es el primerescritor en lengua portuguesa que recibe tal galardón. Hijo
    http://booky.metropoli2000.com/autor006.htm
    Sus libros Sus libros Alzado del suelo La balsa de piedra Ensayo sobre la ceguera Memorial del convento Viaje a Portugal
    Biblioteca de Booky
    Si
    puedes enviarme un e-mail.
    Indice de autores.
    booky@metropoli2000.net

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