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Sergio Ramírez

Sergio Ramírez Mercado (American Spanish: [ˈseɾxjo raˈmiɾes]; born 5 August 1942 in Masatepe, Nicaragua) is a Nicaraguan born and naturalized Colombian citizen, writer and intellectual who was a key figure in 1979 revolution, served in the leftist Government Junta of National Reconstruction and as vice president of the country 1985–1990 under the presidency of Daniel Ortega.[1] He has been described as Nicaragua's "best-known living writer".[2] Since the 1990s, he has been involved in the left-wing opposition to the Nicaraguan government, in particular in the Movimiento de Renovación Sandinista. He was exiled from the country in 2021 and stripped of his nationality by the government in 2023.

Sergio Ramírez
Sergio Ramírez in Madrid to receive the Cervantes Prize (2018)
Vice President of Nicaragua
In office
10 January 1985 – 25 April 1990
PresidentDaniel Ortega
Preceded byAlfonso Callejas Deshón
Francisco Urcuyo (1967)
Succeeded byVirgilio Godoy
Personal details
Born
Sergio Ramírez Mercado

(1942-08-05) 5 August 1942 (age 80)
Masatepe, Nicaragua
Nationality
  • Nicaraguan (until 2023)
  • Spanish (since 2018)
Political partyFSLN, MRS
SpouseGertrudis Guerrero
ResidenceManagua
Alma materNational Autonomous University of Nicaragua
WebsiteOfficial Website

Life and career

Born in Masatepe in 1942, he published his first book, Cuentos, in 1963. He received his law degree from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua of León in 1964, where he obtained the Gold Medal for being the best student.

 
Ramírez (right) on a foreign trip with Nora Astorga and Dutch Speaker of the House Dick Dolman 1982

In 1977 Ramírez became head of the "Group of Twelve", a group of prominent intellectuals, priests, businesspeople, and members of civil society who publicly stated their support for the Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional (FSLN) in its struggle to topple the Presidency of Anastasio Somoza Debayle.[2] The Group were forced into exile in Costa Rica, but their return was one of the key events heralding the end of the Somoza government.[2] With the triumph of the Revolution in 1979, he became part of the Junta of the Government of National Reconstruction, where he presided over the National Council of Education. He was elected vice-president of Nicaragua in 1984 and was sworn in 1985.

Though the FSLN lost power to the UNO coalition headed by Violeta Barrios de Chamorro in 1990, Ramírez continued to serve as the leader of the Sandinista block in the National Assembly until 1995, when he founded the Movimiento de Renovación Sandinista (MRS) because of his differences with other leaders of the FSLN, such as former president Daniel Ortega, on issues of democratic reform. He has since become retrospectively critical of certain Sandinista policies that he views as having turned the country against the FSLN.

He made an unsuccessful bid for president on the MRS ticket in 1996. Since then, Ramírez has retired definitively from politics and his literary work has gained international recognition and his novels have been translated into several languages. He recently won the "Carlos Fuentes" prize, awarded by Mexico, in recognition of his life long work. During this period, he lived in Managua but traveled extensively.[citation needed]

 
Sergio Ramirez at home in Managua. September 2001

He married his wife, Gertrudis "Tulita" Guerrero Mayorga, in 1964. He has three children: Sergio, María, and Dorel and eight grandchildren.[citation needed]

In June 2021, he was forced into exile during repression of the opposition in the lead-up to the 2021 Nicaraguan general election; the government issued a warrant for his arrest in September.[3][4] In February 2023, the Nicaraguan government stripped him, along with 93 other people, of his nationality.[5] The United Nations Refugee Agency called the move "arbitrary" and said "[t]he exercise of fundamental rights, including freedom of expression, freedom of assembly or other rights associated with a person’s political views, can never justify the deprivation of nationality."[6]

Writings

Ramírez began his literary career as a short story writer. His first story, "The student", was published in 1960 in Ventana, a magazine in León. His first book, published three years later, was a collection of stories, but the following, published in 1970, was a full-length novel. Since then, he has alternated these genres with essays and journalism. His international breakthrough came in 1998 when he won the Alfaguara Prize with his novel Margarita, How Beautiful the Sea.

In 1990, he founded La Quincena, a political journal based in Managua that would be published for ten years. He is presently a columnist for La Prensa as well as several newspapers around the world, including El País, La Jornada, El Nacional, El Tiempo and La Opinión. He is also the Director of Carátula, a Central American cultural e-magazine.

In January 2000, he was awarded the first "José María Arguedas Narrative Prize" from the Casa de las Américas. He has taught at the University of Maryland from 1999 to 2000 and again in 2001, and has been visiting professor at various major universities in the United States and Europe. He is also the President of Centroamérica cuenta [es], the most important literary festival in the region.

On 16 November 2017, Ramírez won the Spanish Ministry of Culture's Cervantes Prize, the most prestigious literary prize in the Spanish-speaking world.[2]

In 2018, the Council of Ministers of Spain granted Spanish citizenship to Ramírez.[7]

In February 2023, Ramírez was stripped of Nicaraguan citizenship by the Nicaraguan authorities.[8]

His 2021 novel, Tongolele no sabía bailar (Tongolele Didn’t Know How to Dance) is a detective novel examining the 2018 protests.[2][4] Copies of the book were seized by Nicaraguan customs officials.[2]

Awards and honors

  • Latin American Short Story Award 1971 from Imagen magazine, Caracas, for his short story collection "De tropeles y tropelias".
  • Dashiell Hammett International Prize [es] 1990, for Divine Punishment
  • Order Carlos Fonseca, the highest honor conferred by the FSLN (1990)
  • Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters (France, 1993)
  • Alfaguara Prize 1998 to Margarita, how beautiful the sea
  • Prix Laure Bataillon 1998 for Best Foreign Novel published in France for Un ballo in maschera (Le bal des masques, Éditions Rivages, 1997)
  • Casa de las Américas Novel Prize 2000 José María Arguedas for Margarita, how beautiful the sea.
  • Presidential Honor Medal, Pablo Neruda´s Centennial (Chile, 2004)
  • Masatepe´s Favorite Son, awarded by the Municipal Council (2005 Nicaragua)
  • Jose Donoso Award [es] (Chile, 2011).
  • Officer of France´s Arts and Letters (France, 2013)
  • Carlos Fuentes International Award for Literary Creation in Spanish Language granted by the Government of Mexico, through the National Council for Culture and Arts (Mexico, 2014)[9]
  • Miguel de Cervantes Prize (2017)

Novels and short stories

  • Cuentos (1963)
  • Tiempo de fulgor (1970)
  • De Tropeles y Tropelías (1971)
  • El Pensamiento vivo de Sandino (1975)
  • Charles Atlas también muere (1976)
  • ¿Te dio miedo la sangre? (1978)
  • Castigo Divino (1988) (Divine Punishment, 2015)
  • Clave de Sol (1993)
  • Un baile de máscaras (1995)
  • Cuentos Completos (1998)
  • Margarita, está linda la mar (1998; Premio Alfaguara de Novela)
  • Adiós muchachos (1999) [10]
  • Mentiras Verdaderas (2001)
  • Catalina y Catalina (2001)
  • Sombras nada más (2002)
  • Mil y una muertes (2004)
  • El Reino Animal (2006)
  • Catalina y Catalina, Alfaguara México, 2001. Contiene 11 cuentos:
    • La herencia del bohemio, El pibe Cabriola, La partida de caza, Aparición en la fábrica de ladrillos, Perdón y olvido, Gran Hotel, Un bosque oscuro, Ya todo está en calma, La viuda Carlota, Vallejo y Catalina y Catalina
  • Ómnibus, antología personal, cuentos, Editorial Universidad de Puerto Rico, San Juan, 2008
  • Juego perfecto, Editorial Piedra Santa / Amanuense Editorial, Guatemala, 2008; 11 cuentos
  • El cielo llora por mí, novel, Alfaguara, 2009 (The sky weeps for me, McPherson & Company, 2020)
  • Perdón y olvido, antología de cuentos: 1960 - 2009 (2009)
  • La fugitiva, novel, Alfaguara, 2011
  • La girafa embarazada, children's short story (2013)
  • Flores oscuras, Alfaguara, 2013. Contiene 12 relatos:
    • Adán y Eva, La puerta falsa, La cueva del trono de la calavera, Ya no estás más a mi lado corazón, Las alas de la gloria, La colina 155, No me vayan a haber dejado solo, Ángela, el petimetre y el diablo, El mudo de Truro, Iowa, El autobús amarillo, Abbott y Costello y Flores oscuras
  • Lo que sabe el paladar. Diccionario de los alimentos de Nicaragua, compendio en comidas y recetas, 2014
  • Juan de Juanes, relatos, Alfaguara México, 2014
  • Sara: sus páginas beben del mito bíblico de Abraham y Sara 6
  • A la mesa con Rubén Darío, short stoaries, 2016
  • Ya nadie llora por mí, crime novel, Alfaguara, 2017
  • Tongolele no sabía bailar, Alfaguara, 2021[11]

Ramírez participated in the Stock Exchange of Visions project in 2007.

Essays and testimonies

  • Mis días con el rector, Ediciones Ventana, León, Nicaragua, 1965; artículos publicados en el diario La Noticia a raíz del fallecimiento del rector de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua, Mariano Fiallos Gil
  • Hombre del Caribe, Editorial EDUCA, Costa Rica, 1977 (biografía de Abelardo Cuadra)
  • El muchacho de Niquinohomo, ensayo biográfico sobre Sandino, Unidad Editorial "Juan de Dios Muñoz", Departamento de Propaganda y Educación Política del FSLN, 1981 (reeditado en 1988 por la editorial Vanguardia, Managua)
  • Pensamiento vivo de Sandino, 2 tomos, Editorial Nueva Nicaragua, Managua, 1981
  • Balcanes y volcanes, Editorial Nueva América, Buenos Aires, 1983
  • El alba de oro. La historia viva de Nicaragua, Editorial Siglo XXI, México, 1983
  • Estás en Nicaragua, Munhnik Editores, Barcelona, 1985
  • Las armas del futuro, Editorial Nueva Nicaragua, Managua, 1987
  • La marca del Zorro, Editorial Nueva Nicaragua, Managua, 1989; 17 horas de conversación con el comandante guerrillero Francisco Rivera
  • Quintero en septiembre de 1988
  • Confesión de amor, con prólogo de Ernesto Cardenal; Ediciones Nicarao, Managua, 1991
  • Oficios compartidos, Editorial Siglo XXI, México, 1994
  • Biografía Mariano Fiallos, Editorial Universitaria, León, Nicaragua, 1997
  • Adiós muchachos, Alfaguara 1999; una memoria de la revolución sandinista
  • Mentiras verdaderas, Alfaguara México, 2001
  • El viejo arte de mentir, Fondo de Cultura Económica, México, 2004
  • El señor de los tristes, ensayos literarios, Editorial de la Universidad de Puerto Rico, San Juan, 2006
  • Tambor olvidado, Aguilar, San José, Costa Rica, 2007
  • Cuando todos hablamos, Alfaguara, 2008; contiene más de 200 artículos publicados en su blog en el portal literario El Boomeran(g)

References

  1. ^ History of Vicepresidency 2008-10-25 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b c d e f Jones, Sam (18 September 2021). "'A feeling of deja vu': author Sergio Ramírez on ex-comrade Ortega and Nicaraguan history repeating". the Guardian. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Nicaragua: Chronicle of an Election Foretold". NACLA. 8 November 2021. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b Jacobson, Savannah (20 September 2021). "Press freedom, protest, and the Nicaragua election". Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  5. ^ "Ortega strips another 94 Nicaraguans of their nationality, including writers Sergio Ramirez and Gioconda Belli". El País. 16 February 2023. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  6. ^ "Statement by UNHCR on the arbitrary deprivation of nationality by Nicaragua". United Nations Refugee Agency. 17 February 2023. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  7. ^ "Sergio Ramírez y González Iñárritu obtienen la nacionalidad española". Levante-EMV. Prensa Ibérica. 30 November 2018.
  8. ^ Selser, Gabriela (16 February 2023). "Nicaragua strips citizenship, confiscates property from 94 more political dissidents". Los Angeles Times.
  9. ^ . Latino Fox News. 11 November 2014. Archived from the original on 13 November 2014. Retrieved 12 November 2014.
  10. ^ Memory and Trauma in International Relations: Theories, Cases and Debates edited by Erica Resende, Dovile Budryte p.187
  11. ^ Maciel, Alejandro (3 September 2021). "'Tongolele no sabía bailar' es la novela más reciente de la trilogía de Sergio Ramírez". Los Angeles Times en Español (in Spanish). from the original on 3 September 2021. Retrieved 11 September 2021.

External links

  • Sergio Ramírez - Official Website
  • Sergio Ramírez - Official Facebook Page
  • Sergio Ramírez - Official Twitter
  • Stock Exchange Of Visions: Visions of Sergio Ramírez (Video Interviews)
  • Miami Herald article that includes comments from Ramírez
  • Biography with focus on literature

sergio, ramírez, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, ramírez, second, maternal, family, name, mercado, mercado, american, spanish, ˈseɾxjo, raˈmiɾes, born, august, 1942, masatepe, nicaragua, nicaraguan, born, naturalized, colombian, citizen, writer,. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Ramirez and the second or maternal family name is Mercado Sergio Ramirez Mercado American Spanish ˈseɾxjo raˈmiɾes born 5 August 1942 in Masatepe Nicaragua is a Nicaraguan born and naturalized Colombian citizen writer and intellectual who was a key figure in 1979 revolution served in the leftist Government Junta of National Reconstruction and as vice president of the country 1985 1990 under the presidency of Daniel Ortega 1 He has been described as Nicaragua s best known living writer 2 Since the 1990s he has been involved in the left wing opposition to the Nicaraguan government in particular in the Movimiento de Renovacion Sandinista He was exiled from the country in 2021 and stripped of his nationality by the government in 2023 Sergio RamirezSergio Ramirez in Madrid to receive the Cervantes Prize 2018 Vice President of NicaraguaIn office 10 January 1985 25 April 1990PresidentDaniel OrtegaPreceded byAlfonso Callejas DeshonFrancisco Urcuyo 1967 Succeeded byVirgilio GodoyPersonal detailsBornSergio Ramirez Mercado 1942 08 05 5 August 1942 age 80 Masatepe NicaraguaNationalityNicaraguan until 2023 Spanish since 2018 Political partyFSLN MRSSpouseGertrudis GuerreroResidenceManaguaAlma materNational Autonomous University of NicaraguaWebsiteOfficial Website Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Writings 2 Awards and honors 3 Novels and short stories 4 Essays and testimonies 5 References 6 External linksLife and career EditBorn in Masatepe in 1942 he published his first book Cuentos in 1963 He received his law degree from the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Nicaragua of Leon in 1964 where he obtained the Gold Medal for being the best student Ramirez right on a foreign trip with Nora Astorga and Dutch Speaker of the House Dick Dolman 1982 In 1977 Ramirez became head of the Group of Twelve a group of prominent intellectuals priests businesspeople and members of civil society who publicly stated their support for the Frente Sandinista de Liberacion Nacional FSLN in its struggle to topple the Presidency of Anastasio Somoza Debayle 2 The Group were forced into exile in Costa Rica but their return was one of the key events heralding the end of the Somoza government 2 With the triumph of the Revolution in 1979 he became part of the Junta of the Government of National Reconstruction where he presided over the National Council of Education He was elected vice president of Nicaragua in 1984 and was sworn in 1985 Though the FSLN lost power to the UNO coalition headed by Violeta Barrios de Chamorro in 1990 Ramirez continued to serve as the leader of the Sandinista block in the National Assembly until 1995 when he founded the Movimiento de Renovacion Sandinista MRS because of his differences with other leaders of the FSLN such as former president Daniel Ortega on issues of democratic reform He has since become retrospectively critical of certain Sandinista policies that he views as having turned the country against the FSLN He made an unsuccessful bid for president on the MRS ticket in 1996 Since then Ramirez has retired definitively from politics and his literary work has gained international recognition and his novels have been translated into several languages He recently won the Carlos Fuentes prize awarded by Mexico in recognition of his life long work During this period he lived in Managua but traveled extensively citation needed Sergio Ramirez at home in Managua September 2001 He married his wife Gertrudis Tulita Guerrero Mayorga in 1964 He has three children Sergio Maria and Dorel and eight grandchildren citation needed In June 2021 he was forced into exile during repression of the opposition in the lead up to the 2021 Nicaraguan general election the government issued a warrant for his arrest in September 3 4 In February 2023 the Nicaraguan government stripped him along with 93 other people of his nationality 5 The United Nations Refugee Agency called the move arbitrary and said t he exercise of fundamental rights including freedom of expression freedom of assembly or other rights associated with a person s political views can never justify the deprivation of nationality 6 Writings Edit Ramirez began his literary career as a short story writer His first story The student was published in 1960 in Ventana a magazine in Leon His first book published three years later was a collection of stories but the following published in 1970 was a full length novel Since then he has alternated these genres with essays and journalism His international breakthrough came in 1998 when he won the Alfaguara Prize with his novel Margarita How Beautiful the Sea In 1990 he founded La Quincena a political journal based in Managua that would be published for ten years He is presently a columnist for La Prensa as well as several newspapers around the world including El Pais La Jornada El Nacional El Tiempo and La Opinion He is also the Director of Caratula a Central American cultural e magazine In January 2000 he was awarded the first Jose Maria Arguedas Narrative Prize from the Casa de las Americas He has taught at the University of Maryland from 1999 to 2000 and again in 2001 and has been visiting professor at various major universities in the United States and Europe He is also the President of Centroamerica cuenta es the most important literary festival in the region On 16 November 2017 Ramirez won the Spanish Ministry of Culture s Cervantes Prize the most prestigious literary prize in the Spanish speaking world 2 In 2018 the Council of Ministers of Spain granted Spanish citizenship to Ramirez 7 In February 2023 Ramirez was stripped of Nicaraguan citizenship by the Nicaraguan authorities 8 His 2021 novel Tongolele no sabia bailar Tongolele Didn t Know How to Dance is a detective novel examining the 2018 protests 2 4 Copies of the book were seized by Nicaraguan customs officials 2 Awards and honors EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sergio Ramirez news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Latin American Short Story Award 1971 from Imagen magazine Caracas for his short story collection De tropeles y tropelias Dashiell Hammett International Prize es 1990 for Divine Punishment Order Carlos Fonseca the highest honor conferred by the FSLN 1990 Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters France 1993 Alfaguara Prize 1998 to Margarita how beautiful the sea Prix Laure Bataillon 1998 for Best Foreign Novel published in France for Un ballo in maschera Le bal des masques Editions Rivages 1997 Casa de las Americas Novel Prize 2000 Jose Maria Arguedas for Margarita how beautiful the sea Presidential Honor Medal Pablo Neruda s Centennial Chile 2004 Masatepe s Favorite Son awarded by the Municipal Council 2005 Nicaragua Jose Donoso Award es Chile 2011 Officer of France s Arts and Letters France 2013 Carlos Fuentes International Award for Literary Creation in Spanish Language granted by the Government of Mexico through the National Council for Culture and Arts Mexico 2014 9 Miguel de Cervantes Prize 2017 Novels and short stories EditCuentos 1963 Tiempo de fulgor 1970 De Tropeles y Tropelias 1971 El Pensamiento vivo de Sandino 1975 Charles Atlas tambien muere 1976 Te dio miedo la sangre 1978 Castigo Divino 1988 Divine Punishment 2015 Clave de Sol 1993 Un baile de mascaras 1995 Cuentos Completos 1998 Margarita esta linda la mar 1998 Premio Alfaguara de Novela Adios muchachos 1999 10 Mentiras Verdaderas 2001 Catalina y Catalina 2001 Sombras nada mas 2002 Mil y una muertes 2004 El Reino Animal 2006 Catalina y Catalina Alfaguara Mexico 2001 Contiene 11 cuentos La herencia del bohemio El pibe Cabriola La partida de caza Aparicion en la fabrica de ladrillos Perdon y olvido Gran Hotel Un bosque oscuro Ya todo esta en calma La viuda Carlota Vallejo y Catalina y Catalina omnibus antologia personal cuentos Editorial Universidad de Puerto Rico San Juan 2008 Juego perfecto Editorial Piedra Santa Amanuense Editorial Guatemala 2008 11 cuentos El cielo llora por mi novel Alfaguara 2009 The sky weeps for me McPherson amp Company 2020 Perdon y olvido antologia de cuentos 1960 2009 2009 La fugitiva novel Alfaguara 2011 La girafa embarazada children s short story 2013 Flores oscuras Alfaguara 2013 Contiene 12 relatos Adan y Eva La puerta falsa La cueva del trono de la calavera Ya no estas mas a mi lado corazon Las alas de la gloria La colina 155 No me vayan a haber dejado solo Angela el petimetre y el diablo El mudo de Truro Iowa El autobus amarillo Abbott y Costello y Flores oscuras Lo que sabe el paladar Diccionario de los alimentos de Nicaragua compendio en comidas y recetas 2014 Juan de Juanes relatos Alfaguara Mexico 2014 Sara sus paginas beben del mito biblico de Abraham y Sara 6 A la mesa con Ruben Dario short stoaries 2016 Ya nadie llora por mi crime novel Alfaguara 2017 Tongolele no sabia bailar Alfaguara 2021 11 Ramirez participated in the Stock Exchange of Visions project in 2007 Essays and testimonies EditMis dias con el rector Ediciones Ventana Leon Nicaragua 1965 articulos publicados en el diario La Noticia a raiz del fallecimiento del rector de la Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Nicaragua Mariano Fiallos Gil Hombre del Caribe Editorial EDUCA Costa Rica 1977 biografia de Abelardo Cuadra El muchacho de Niquinohomo ensayo biografico sobre Sandino Unidad Editorial Juan de Dios Munoz Departamento de Propaganda y Educacion Politica del FSLN 1981 reeditado en 1988 por la editorial Vanguardia Managua Pensamiento vivo de Sandino 2 tomos Editorial Nueva Nicaragua Managua 1981 Balcanes y volcanes Editorial Nueva America Buenos Aires 1983 El alba de oro La historia viva de Nicaragua Editorial Siglo XXI Mexico 1983 Estas en Nicaragua Munhnik Editores Barcelona 1985 Las armas del futuro Editorial Nueva Nicaragua Managua 1987 La marca del Zorro Editorial Nueva Nicaragua Managua 1989 17 horas de conversacion con el comandante guerrillero Francisco Rivera Quintero en septiembre de 1988 Confesion de amor con prologo de Ernesto Cardenal Ediciones Nicarao Managua 1991 Oficios compartidos Editorial Siglo XXI Mexico 1994 Biografia Mariano Fiallos Editorial Universitaria Leon Nicaragua 1997 Adios muchachos Alfaguara 1999 una memoria de la revolucion sandinista Mentiras verdaderas Alfaguara Mexico 2001 El viejo arte de mentir Fondo de Cultura Economica Mexico 2004 El senor de los tristes ensayos literarios Editorial de la Universidad de Puerto Rico San Juan 2006 Tambor olvidado Aguilar San Jose Costa Rica 2007 Cuando todos hablamos Alfaguara 2008 contiene mas de 200 articulos publicados en su blog en el portal literario El Boomeran g References Edit History of Vicepresidency Archived 2008 10 25 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f Jones Sam 18 September 2021 A feeling of deja vu author Sergio Ramirez on ex comrade Ortega and Nicaraguan history repeating the Guardian Retrieved 17 November 2021 Nicaragua Chronicle of an Election Foretold NACLA 8 November 2021 Retrieved 17 November 2021 a b Jacobson Savannah 20 September 2021 Press freedom protest and the Nicaragua election Columbia Journalism Review Retrieved 17 November 2021 Ortega strips another 94 Nicaraguans of their nationality including writers Sergio Ramirez and Gioconda Belli El Pais 16 February 2023 Retrieved 21 February 2023 Statement by UNHCR on the arbitrary deprivation of nationality by Nicaragua United Nations Refugee Agency 17 February 2023 Retrieved 21 February 2023 Sergio Ramirez y Gonzalez Inarritu obtienen la nacionalidad espanola Levante EMV Prensa Iberica 30 November 2018 Selser Gabriela 16 February 2023 Nicaragua strips citizenship confiscates property from 94 more political dissidents Los Angeles Times Sergio Ramirez wins Mexico s Carlos Fuentes Prize Latino Fox News 11 November 2014 Archived from the original on 13 November 2014 Retrieved 12 November 2014 Memory and Trauma in International Relations Theories Cases and Debates edited by Erica Resende Dovile Budryte p 187 Maciel Alejandro 3 September 2021 Tongolele no sabia bailar es la novela mas reciente de la trilogia de Sergio Ramirez Los Angeles Times en Espanol in Spanish Archived from the original on 3 September 2021 Retrieved 11 September 2021 External links EditSergio Ramirez Official Website Sergio Ramirez Official Facebook Page Sergio Ramirez Official Twitter Stock Exchange Of Visions Visions of Sergio Ramirez Video Interviews Miami Herald article that includes comments from Ramirez Biography with focus on literature Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sergio Ramirez amp oldid 1144530606, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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