The Skin of the Sky_Poniatowska
2006 Nominated

The Skin of the Sky

artwork-image

ABOUT
THE BOOK

The Skin of the Sky is the fascinating and haunting story of the life of Lorenzo de Tena, a brilliant Mexican astronomer. Born in the 1930s, the illegitimate son of a businessman and a peasant woman, Lorenzo lives happily with his mother, brothers, and sisters on their mother’s farm on a small plot of land outside Mexico City. When Lorenzo’s mother dies, his father brings the children to live with him in the capital. Thrust into a privileged world, the children struggle to adjust, and an angry Lorenzo turns to the study of the stars to find solace. He pursues his studies at Harvard, then returns to Mexico, where he attempts to do first-world scientific research in a third-world country. A complex and contradictory man, Lorenzo strives to make his country a better place for all her people, especially the very poor and disenfranchised.

ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Elena
Poniatowska

Elena Poniatowska was born in France, in 1933. Her mother was the daughter of wealthy Mexican aristocrats and her father, a French count of Polish origin. In 1942, Poniatowska and her family moved to Mexico to escape war-time deprivations.

She began her writing career as a journalist. Her first job involved writing society news for the daily newspaper Excelsior. Soon, she moved on to interviewing cultural and political figures, such as muralist Diego Rivera. Most of these writings are collected in Palabras cruzadas, (1961). Through journalism and access to her interviewees, Poniatowska began to understand the Mexican society, its politics and its institutions.

She is best known for her gripping account of a massacre that took place in 1968 on Mexico City’s Plaza de Tres Culturas, also known as Tlatelolco.

Elena Poniatowska was born in France, in 1933. Her mother was the daughter of wealthy Mexican aristocrats and her father, a French count of Polish origin. In 1942, Poniatowska and her family moved to Mexico to escape war-time deprivations.

She began her writing career as a journalist. Her first job involved writing society news for the daily newspaper Excelsior. Soon, she moved on to interviewing cultural and political figures, such as muralist Diego Rivera. Most of these writings are collected in Palabras cruzadas, (1961). Through journalism and access to her interviewees, Poniatowska began to understand the Mexican society, its politics and its institutions.

She is best known for her gripping account of a massacre that took place in 1968 on Mexico City’s Plaza de Tres Culturas, also known as Tlatelolco.

ABOUT
THE TRANSLATOR Deanna
Heikkinen

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Country
France, Mexico
Original Language
Spanish
Publisher
Farrar
Translator
Deanna Heikkinen

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