Javier Marías Franco (; 20 September 1951 – 11 September 2022) was a Spanish author, translator, and columnist. Marías published fifteen novels, including A Heart So White (Corazón tan blanco, 1992), Tomorrow in the Battle Think on Me (Mañana en la batalla piensa en mí, 1994) and the Your Face Tomorrow trilogy, widely regarded as his greatest achievement. In addition to his novels, he also published three collections of short stories and various essays. As one of Spain's most celebrated novelists, his books have been translated into forty-six languages and sold close to nine million copies internationally. He received several awards for his work, such as the Rómulo Gallegos Prize (1995), the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award (1997), the International Nonino Prize (2011), and the Austrian State Prize for European Literature (2011).

Marías studied philosophy and literature at the Complutense University of Madrid before going on to teach at several universities, including his alma mater, universities in Oxford and Venice, and Wellesley College in Massachusetts. In 1997, he was awarded the title of King of the Kingdom of Redonda by its predecessor Jon Wynne-Tyson for his understanding of the kingdom and for mentioning the story of one of its previous kings, John Gawsworth, in his novel All Souls (Todas las almas, 1989).

Life

Javier Marías Franco was born in Madrid on 20 September 1951.). His mother was the writer . Two of his siblings were art historian and film critic and economist . Marías spent parts of his childhood in the United States, where his father taught at various institutions, including Yale University and Wellesley College. His mother died when Javier was 26 years old. He was educated at the Colegio Estudio in Madrid. After having returned to Madrid, Marías studied philosophy and literary sciences at the Complutense University of Madrid from 1968 to 1973. From the 1970s onwards, he was involved in translating English literary works into the Spanish language. His first literary employment consisted of translating Dracula scripts for his maternal uncle, Jesús Franco.

Writing

Marías began writing in earnest at an early age. "The Life and Death of Marcelino Iturriaga", one of the short stories in While the Women are Sleeping (2010), was written when he was just 14. He ran away from home to write his first novel and went to live with his uncle in Paris. It was about an American family The novel is dedicated to the Spanish author Juan Benet, who managed to compel the publisher to print the book, and to Vicente Molina Foix, who provided him with the title.

His translations included work by Updike, Hardy, Conrad, Nabokov, Faulkner, James, Stevenson, and Browne. In 1979, he won the Spanish national award for translation for his version of Sterne's Tristram Shandy.

In 1986, Marías published El hombre sentimental (The Man of Feeling), and in 1989 he published Todas las almas (All Souls), which was set at Oxford University. The Spanish film director Gracia Querejeta released El Último viaje de Robert Rylands (Robert Rylands' Last Journey), adapted from Todas las almas, in 1996.

His 1992 novel Corazón tan blanco is centered on Juan, a translator for the United Nations (UN), and its English version A Heart So White was translated by Margaret Jull Costa. It was received well by the literary critics and won the Spanish Critics Award. In his 1994 novel, Mañana en la batalla piensa en mí, the protagonist is a ghostwriter.

The protagonists of the novels written since 1986 are all interpreters or translators of one kind or another, based on his own experience as a translator and teacher of translation at Oxford University. Of these protagonists, Marías wrote, "They are people who are renouncing their own voices." In 2009, the trilogy was published as one single volume.

It was followed by the novel Los enamoramientos (The Infatuations) in 2011, a story about a woman drawn into a murder mystery. The novel won the state-run National novel prize, but Marías rejected the award saying he did not want to be indebted to a government of any kind.

He also was a regular contributor to El País, whose editor-in-chief Pepa Bueno lamented his death and called it a sad day for Spanish literature. In 2005–2006, an English version of his column, "La Zona Fantasma", appeared in the monthly magazine The Believer.

Redonda

After having been awarded the title, King of Redonda, he was also known as Xavier I. and, from 2000 onwards, Marías operated a small publishing house under the name of Reino de Redonda. Its first book of the publishing house was La mujer de Huguenin by the first King of Redondo and author M. P. Shiel. After "taking the throne" of Redonda, Marías began a publishing imprint named Reino de Redonda ("Kingdom of Redonda").

Marías conferred many titles during his reign upon people he liked, including upon Pedro Almodóvar (Duke of Trémula), António Lobo Antunes (Duke of Cocodrilos), John Ashbery (Duke of Convexo), Pierre Bourdieu (Duke of Desarraigo), William Boyd (Duke of Brazzaville), Jonathan Coe (Duke of Prunes), Luis Antonio de Villena (Duke of Malmundo), and Juan Villoro (Duke of Nochevieja).

Premio Reino de Redonda

Marías created a literary prize, the Premio Reino de Redonda to be judged by the dukes and duchesses. The jury was of extraordinary prominence, In addition to prize money, the winners, listed below, received a duchy:

  • 2001 – J. M. Coetzee (Duke of Deshonra)
  • 2002 – John H. Elliott (Duchess of Ontario)
  • 2006 – Ray Bradbury (Duke of Diente de León)
  • 2007 – George Steiner (Duke of Girona)
  • 2008 – Umberto Eco (Duke of la Isla del Día de Antes)
  • 2009 – Marc Fumaroli (Duke of Houyhnhnms)
  • 2010 – Milan Kundera

Death

Marías died of pneumonia at the age of 70.The Spanish novelist Eduardo Mendoza remembered him as the best writer in Spain at the time of his death,

Awards and honours

  • 1979: (Germanic languages) for Tristram Shandy
  • 1986: Premio Herralde for El hombre sentimental
  • 1992: Premio de la Crítica Española
  • 1995: Romulo Gallegos Prize
  • 1996: Prix Femina étranger for Demain dans la bataille pense à moi (Mañana en la batalla piensa en mí)
  • 1997: Nelly Sachs Prize
  • 2000: Grinzane Cavour Prize At his investiture he agreed with Robert Louis Stevenson that the work of novelists is "pretty childish," but also argued that it is impossible to narrate real events, and that "you can only fully tell stories about what has never happened, the invented and imagined."
  • 2010: America Award for a lifetime contribution to international writing
  • 2011: International Nonino Prize in Italy
  • 2011: Austrian State Prize for European Literature
  • 2013: Prix Formentor
  • 2013: National Book Critics Circle Award (fiction) shortlist for The Infatuations
  • 2017: LIBAR 2017 Award for the most outstanding Hispano-American author.
  • 2021: Elected a Royal Society of Literature International Writer

Works

All English translations by Margaret Jull Costa unless otherwise indicated.

Novels

  • Los dominios del lobo (1971)
  • Travesía del horizonte (1973). Voyage Along the Horizon, translated by Kristina Cordero (McSweeney's, 2006)
  • El monarca del tiempo (1978)
  • El siglo (1983)
  • El hombre sentimental (1986). The Man of Feeling (U.S.: New Directions/UK: The Harvill Press, 2003)
  • Todas las almas (1989). All Souls (The Harvill Press, 1992; New Directions, 2000)
  • Corazón tan blanco (1992). A Heart So White (The Harvill Press, 1995; New Directions, 2002)
  • Mañana en la batalla piensa en mí (1994). Tomorrow in the Battle Think on Me (The Harvill Press, 1996; New Directions, 2001)
  • Negra espalda del tiempo (1998). Dark Back of Time, translated by Esther Allen (New Directions, 2001; Chatto & Windus, 2003)
  • Tu rostro mañana 1. Fiebre y lanza (2002). Your Face Tomorrow 1: Fever and Spear (U.S.: New Directions/UK: Chatto & Windus, 2005)
  • Tu rostro mañana 2. Baile y sueño (2004). Your Face Tomorrow 2: Dance and Dream (U.S.: New Directions/UK: Chatto & Windus, 2006)
  • Tu rostro mañana 3. Veneno y sombra y adiós (2007). Your Face Tomorrow 3: Poison, Shadow and Farewell (U.S.: New Directions/UK: Chatto & Windus, 2009)
  • Así empieza lo malo (2014). Thus Bad Begins (U.S.: Knopf/UK: Hamish Hamilton, 2016)
  • Berta Isla (2017). Berta Isla (US: Knopf/UK: Hamish Hamilton, 2018)
  • Tomás Nevinson (2021)

Novellas and short stories

  • Mientras ellas duermen (1990). While the Women Are Sleeping (U.S.: New Directions/UK: Chatto & Windus, 2010)
  • Cuando fui mortal (1996). When I Was Mortal (The Harvill Press, 1999; New Directions, 2000)
  • Mala índole (1996). Bad Nature, or With Elvis in Mexico, translated by Esther Allen (New Directions, 2010)

Anthologies

  • Between Eternities & Other Writings (U.S.: Penguin/UK: Hamish Hamilton, 2017). Later compiled in Spanish as Entre Eternidades. Y otros escritos (2018)

Nonfiction

  • Vidas escritas (1992). Written Lives (U.S.: New Directions/UK: Canongate, 2006). Multiple short literary biographies.
  • Venice, an interior (2016) (London: Penguin Books, 2016)

Notes

References

Further reading

  • Berg, Karen, Javier Marías's Postmodern Praxis: Humor and Interplay Between Reality and Fiction in His Novels and Essays (2008) (Doctoral dissertation (2006), later published as book (2012 ed.))
  • Cunado, Isabel, El Espectro de la Herencia: La Narrativa de Javier Marías (2004).
  • Herzberger, David K. A Companion to Javier Marías. Rochester, NY: Tamesis Books, 2011.
  • Chelsea Bauch, "Exclusive Q&A: Spanish Author Javier Marías", 30 November 2009.
  • "Airships" (translated by Margaret Jull Costa), Granta 107, Summer 2009.
  • "Javier Marías", BBC HardTalk Extra, 3 March 2006. Video
  • Wyatt Mason, "A Man Who Wasn't There", The New Yorker, 14 November 2005.
  • "Feeling London's bombs in Madrid", The New York Times, 11 July 2005.
  • Sarah Emily Miano, "Betrayal of a blood brother", The Observer, 8 May 2005.

<!--already in refs* Aida Edemariam, "Looking for Luisa", The Guardian, 7 May 2005.-->

  • "How to remember, how to forget", The New York Times, 11 September 2004.
  • "Fewer Scruples", Barcelona Review, No. 15, November 1999.
  • "The Limits of Human Memory: On Proust and Javier Marías" The Quarterly Conversation, Issue 17.
  • John M. Keller, “Interview with Javier Marías”. Dr. Cicero, Spring 2021.