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・ Alberto López Rojas
・ Alberto M. Carvalho
・ Alberto Machimbarrena
・ Alberto Macías
・ Alberto Madruga da Costa
・ Alberto Magnelli
・ Alberto Malagón Amate
・ Alberto Malaspina
・ Alberto Malaspina (painter)
・ Alberto Malesani
・ Alberto Malo i Navio
・ Alberto Malusci
・ Alberto Mamba
・ Alberto Mancini
・ Alberto Manga
Alberto Manguel
・ Alberto Mantelli
・ Alberto Manuel Brenes Biological Reserve
・ Alberto Manuel Campos
・ Alberto Manuel Domínguez Rivas
・ Alberto Manzano
・ Alberto Manzi
・ Alberto Maranhão Theatre
・ Alberto Marchetti
・ Alberto Marchiori
・ Alberto Marcos Rey
・ Alberto Marcovecchio
・ Alberto Marghieri
・ Alberto Maria Fontana
・ Alberto Mario González


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Alberto Manguel : ウィキペディア英語版
Alberto Manguel

Alberto Manguel (born 1948 in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine-born Canadian anthologist, translator, essayist, novelist and editor. He is the author of numerous non-fiction books such as ''The Dictionary of Imaginary Places'' (co-written with Gianni Guadalupi in 1980), ''A History of Reading'' (1996), ''The Library at Night'' (2007) and ''Homer's Iliad and Odyssey: A Biography'' (2008); and novels such as ''News From a Foreign Country Came'' (1991). Though almost all of Manguel's books were written in English, two of his novels (''El regreso'' and ''Todos los hombres son mentirosos'') were written in Spanish, and ''El regreso'' has not yet been published in English. Manguel has also written film criticism such as ''Bride of Frankenstein'' (1997) and collections of essays such as ''Into the Looking Glass Wood'' (1998). In 2007, Manguel was selected to be that year's annual lecturer for the prestigious Massey Lectures.
For over twenty years, Manguel has edited a number of literary
anthologies on a variety of themes or genres ranging from erotica and gay stories to fantastic literature and mysteries.
==Career==
Manguel spent his first years in Israel where his father was the Argentine ambassador, returning to his native country at the age of seven. Later, in Buenos Aires, when Manguel was still a teenager, he met the writer Jorge Luis Borges, a customer of the Pygmalion Anglo-German bookshop in Buenos Aires where Manguel worked after school. As Borges was almost blind, he would ask others to read out loud for him, and Manguel became one of Borges' readers, several times a week from 1964 to 1968.
In Buenos Aires, Manguel attended the Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires from 1961 to 1966; among his teachers were notable Argentinian intellectuals such as the historian Alberto Salas, the Cervantes scholar Isaias Lerner and the literary critic Enrique Pezzoni. Manguel did one year (1967) at the Universidad de Buenos Aires, Filosofía y Letras, but he abandoned his studies and started working at the recently founded Editorial Galerna of (Guillermo Schavelzon ) (who thirty-five years later, now established in Barcelona, was to become Manguel's literary agent). In 1969 Manguel travelled to Europe and worked as a reader for various publishing companies: Denoél, Gallimard and Les Lettres Nouvelles in Paris, and Calder & Boyars in London.

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