Alberto Laiseca
{{short description|Argentine writer and TV host}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2021}}
{{Infobox writer
| name = Alberto Laiseca
| image = Laisecaretrato.jpg
| caption = Laiseca in 2004
| pseudonym =
| birth_name = Alberto Jesús Laiseca
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1941|2|11}}
| birth_place = Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina[https://thebiography.us/en/laiseca-alberto Biography of Alberto Laiseca] TheBiography.us
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|2016|12|22|1941|2|11}}
| death_place = Buenos Aires, Argentina
| occupation = {{flatlist|
- Writer
- actor
- television host
- poet
}}
| period = 1976–2016
| genre = {{flatlist|
- Delirious realism
- Horror
- Fantasy
- Science Fiction
- Supernatural fiction
- Drama
- Essay
- Genre fiction
- Dark Fantasy
- Post-apocalyptic fiction
- Poetry
- Suspense
- Imaginary realism
}}
| notableworks = {{flatlist|
- Su turno para morir (1976)
- Aventuras de un novelista atonal (1982)
- El jardín de las máquinas parlantes (1993)
- Los sorias (1998)
}}
| movement =
| spouse =
| children =
| signature =
| website =
}}
Alberto Jesús Laiseca (11 February 1941 – 22 December 2016)[http://www.eternacadencia.com.ar/blog/item/tres-poemas-para-despedir-a-laiseca.html Three poems for parting Alberto Laiseca] 26 December 2016 – Eterna Cadencia {{in lang|es}} was an Argentine author of horror, supernatural fiction, suspense, science fiction, and fantastic literature. He also worked as a TV host and narrator for horror-related projects. Laiseca is considered as one of the most respected and noteworthy writers of his generation.
Biography
Laiseca was born in Rosario, however, shortly after his birth his family relocated first to Unquillo and later to Camilo Aldao, in the south of Cordoba Province where he lived as a young man until he moved to Santa Fe to pursue a college education. In 1964 he dropped out and went to work as a migrant agricultural worker during the harvests in Mendoza, and in other argentine provinces. Laiseca had a difficult relationship with his father a prominent medical doctor in Camilo Aldao. Laiseca was a chain-smoker.Deliciosas perversiones polimorfas by Eduardo Montes-Bradley. A documentary film produced by Contrakultura Films with the support of the Instituto Nacional de Cine y Artes Audiovisuales. Argentina, 2003
He is one of the most respected writers of his generation. He published 13 novels and numerous short stories, as well as several essays and non-fiction books. He also published a book of brief poems based on Classical Chinese poetry, Poemas chinos ("Chinese Poetry", 1987). Most of his short stories have been collected in book collections. His monumental novel Los sorias (1998){{snd}}which had remained unpublished for twenty years after its completion{{snd}}is currently considered, due to its extension, as the longest novel in Argentine literature.
He achieved further popularity after appearing as the TV host for the anthology series "Cuentos de terror" (Horror Stories), for the Argentine cable television channel I.Sat. The show consisted of Laiseca narrating -with his own style and words- classical or well-known horror short stories against an empty and dark backdrop, including some of Laiseca's own short stories, such as the famous La cabeza de mi padre ("The Head of My Father").[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENKBSGRsfpw The Head of My Father (Alberto Laiseca) by Alberto Laiseca] 3 October 2009 – YouTube He later served in a similar capacity as host of the television program "Cine de terror" (Horror Cinema), for Latin American cable television network with classic programming Retro.
Bibliography
{{div-col}}
- Las aventuras del profesor Eusebio Filigranati (2014)
- Las cuatro torres de babel (2013)
- Cuentos completos (2013)
- Cuentos de terror (2013)
- iluSorias (2013)
- Si, soy mala poeta pero... (2013)
- Gracias Chanchúbelo (2013)
- Beber en rojo (2012)
- El artista (2011)
- En sueños he llorado (2001)
- El gusano máximo de la vida misma (1999)
- {{ill|Los sorias|es}} (1998)
- El jardín de las máquinas parlantes (1993)
- Por favor ¡plágienme! (1991)
- La mujer en la muralla (1990)
- La hija de Kheops (1986)
- Poemas chinos (1987)
- Aventuras de un novelista atonal (1982)
- Matando enanos a garrotazos (1982)
- Su turno para morir (1976)
{{div-col-end}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.albertolaiseca.blogspot.com/ Official blog of Laiseca].
- {{cite web|title=The Sorias (Los sorias) by Alberto Laiseca|url=https://theuntranslated.wordpress.com/2015/05/27/the-sorias-los-sorias-by-alberto-laiseca/|website=The Untranslated|date=16 November 2018}}
- [https://vimeo.com/150449246 Deliciosas perversiones polimorfas], a documentary by Eduardo Montes-Bradley.
- [http://www.crapula.it/alberto-laiseca-autore-de-los-sorias/ Dossier on Alberto Laiseca (in Italian)].
- {{IMDb title|0428455 }}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Laiseca, Alberto}}
Category:20th-century Argentine writers
Category:20th-century Argentine male writers
Category:Argentine male short story writers
Category:Hyperreality theorists
Category:Argentine male essayists
Category:Translators of Edgar Allan Poe
Category:Translators to Spanish