Jump to content

Últimos días de la víctima (novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Últimos días de la víctima (English: Last Days of the Victim) is the first novel by Argentine author José Pablo Feinmann. It was published in Spanish in Buenos Aires by Legasa in 1979,[1] 1983[2] and 1987.[3] It was reprinted there by Seix Barral in 1996[3] and 2006,[4] and by Planeta in 2015.[5] It was translated into French by Francois Campo-Timal and published in Paris with the title Les Derniers jours de la victime by Albin Michel in 1991 and by Le Livre de Poche (LGF) in 1993.[6] This book is a novela negra, the Spanish term for noir fiction.[7] The plot of the novel follows the contract killer Raúl Mendizábal, who is spying on a mysterious person named Rodolfo Külpe, whom he has been paid to kill.

In 1982, it was adapted into film for the first time in the homonymous Argentine classic Últimos días de la víctima, directed by Adolfo Aristarain. In 1988, it was adapted again for Two to Tango, an Argentine-American coproduction directed by Hector Olivera, with Roger Corman as executive producer.[8][9][10][11] It was also adapted for the French-Cuban TV movie Les derniers jours de la victime (1995), directed by Bruno Gantillon.[12]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Google Books
  2. ^ Feinman. López Rega, la cara oscura de Perón. Legasa. 1987. Page 6. Google Books
  3. ^ a b Lockhart, Latin American Mystery Writers,p 84
  4. ^ Google Books
  5. ^ Google Books
  6. ^ Rita de Grandis. Reciclaje cultural y memoria revolucionaria: la práctica polémica de José Pablo Feinmann. Editorial Biblos. 2006. p 227. "José Pablo Feinmann" (1996) Magazine littéraire, issues 339-344, page 50 Google Books. "Albin Michel" (1992) Livres hebdo, volume 14, issues 7-8, page 44 Google Books. "Les Derniers jours de la victime" (1991) Magazine littéraire, issues 284-289, page 93 Google Books. "01286 Feinmann Jose Pablo - Les Derniers jours de la victime" (1993) Livres de France, issues 153-158 Google Books. (1993) Livres hebdo, issues 71-74, pages 35 and 97 Google Books.
  7. ^ Glen S Close. Contemporary Hispanic Crime Fiction: A Transatlantic Discourse on Urban Violence. Palgrave Macmillan. 2008. Page 109. See also the following pages.
  8. ^ "Two to Tango", Variety's Film Reviews 1989-1990, volume 21 of Variety's Film Reviews (R R Bowker's Database Publishing Division), 22 February 1989, Google Books
  9. ^ Jay Robert Nash and Stanley R Ross. The Motion Picture Guide 1990 Annual: The Films of 1989. Cinebooks. 1990. Page 233. Google Books
  10. ^ "Two to Tango". Video Sourcebook. Thomson Gale. Gale / Cengage Learning. 2007. Page 3054. Google Books.
  11. ^ (1991) Veja, volume 24, issues 36-44, page 138 Google Books
  12. ^ "Les derniers jours de la victime" at IMDb

Sources

[edit]
  • Amelia S. Simpson. Detective fiction from Latin America. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. 1990. Pages 39, 54, 60, 61, 139, 141 to 146, 155, 185. Google Books.
  • Darrell B. Lockhart (editor). "Jose Pablo Feinman (b 1943)". Latin American Mystery Writers: An A-to-Z Guide. Greenwood Press. 2004. Page 82.
  • "La Novela De Feinmann: Una Reflexion Sobre La Violencia" (1981) Crear en la cultura nacional, issues 4–11, p 31; see also passim Google Books
  • Ana Maria Zubieta, "La novela negra como fuente" (1983) Revista de la Universidad de México, volume 38 (new series), issue 21, page 43 et seq, Google Books: [1] [2]
  • (2004) QueHacer, issues 146–148, page 102
  • Giuseppe Petronio, Jorge B Rivera and Luigi Volta. "José Pablo Feinmann". Los héroes "difíciles": la literatura policial en la Argentina y en Italia. Corregidor. 1991. pp. 143–150. See also page 25. Google Books
  • (2001) Revista de crítica literaria latinoamericana, issue 54, page 51 Google Books
  • (2001) Semiosis, issue 7, page 55 Google Books