Florencia Abbate
Encyclopedia
Florencia Abbate is an Argentinean writer and journalist.

She studied literature at the UBA
UBA
-Abbreviations:* "Underwater Breathing Apparatus", some types of rebreather scuba set. For early British UBA's see Siebe Gorman CDBA.* Union Belge De L'Automatique, the Belgian branch of EUROMAT* Unit of Binding Atoms...

 and has worked for different media, such as "La Nación", "Perfil", "Página 12" or "El país" among others.

She was a participating author of the 2004 editor's week in Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires is the capital and largest city of Argentina, and the second-largest metropolitan area in South America, after São Paulo. It is located on the western shore of the estuary of the Río de la Plata, on the southeastern coast of the South American continent...

.
In 2007, she spent a "virtual year" in Hamilton, Canada.

Novels

  • "Magic Resort", Emecé, Grupo Planeta, 2007. ISBN 978-950-04-2902-3
  • "El grito
    El grito
    El grito is an Argentine novel, written by Florencia Abbate on her debut. It was first published in 2004.- Summary :It's a short novel that takes place at the end of 2001 in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in the middle of the economic meltdown that brought the country to the brink of social disintegration...

    ", Emecé, Grupo Planeta, 2004. ISBN 978-950-04-2531-5

Poetry

  • Los transparentes, Editorial Libros del Rojas, 2000, with drawings by Adolfo Nigro.
  • Una sola alma somos: mapuches, Tantalia, 2006. ISBN 978-987-22809-3-2

Essay

  • Él, ella, ¿ella?, apuntes sobre transexualidad masculina, Editorial Perfil, 1998. ISBN 978-950-639-209-3
  • Gilles Deleuze para principiantes, Editorial Era Naciente, 2001, with drawings by Pablo Páez. ISBN 978-987-9065-92-1
  • Literatura latinoamericana para principiantes, Editorial Era Naciente, 2003, with drawings by Diego Parés. ISBN 978-987-555-005-6

Short stories

  • Una terraza propia, Editorial Norma, 2006
  • Puntos de fuga, Editorial Tantalia, 1996. Travel diary
  • Las siete maravillas del mundo, Editorial Estrada, 1996. Tales for children

External links

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