Andrea Chapela
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Andrea Chapela (born 1990) is a
Mexican Mexican may refer to: Mexico and its culture *Being related to, from, or connected to the country of Mexico, in North America ** People *** Mexicans, inhabitants of the country Mexico and their descendants *** Mexica, ancient indigenous people ...
writer. She was born in Mexico City. She studied chemistry at UNAM and has a MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Iowa. She is also an alumna of the Clarion West Writers Workshop for fantasy and science fiction, class of 2017. She lived for two years in the
Residencia de Estudiantes The Residencia de Estudiantes, literally the "Student Residence", is a centre of Spanish cultural life in Madrid. The Residence was founded to provide accommodation for students along the lines of classic colleges at Bologna, Salamanca, Cambridge ...
in Madrid, where she was given a grant to work on an essay collection, and has been a FONCA scholar twice (2016-2017 for stories and 2019-2020 for novels). She is the author of several books in Spanish, among them the young adult tetralogy ''Vâudïz'', the essay collection ''Grados de miopía'' and the story collections ''Un año de servicio a la habitación'' and ''Ansibles, perfiladores y otras máquinas de ingenio''. Some of her work has been translated into English, including the book ''The Visible Unseen'', a translation by Kelsi Vanada of Chapela's 2019 book ''Grados de miopía''.


Science Fiction and Fantasy

The four books of Chapela's YA fantasy tetralogy ''Vâudïz'' ''(La heredera, El creador, La cuentista'' and ''El cuento)'' were published between 2009 and 2015 by the publishing house Urano. In 2016, Chapela was awarded a Jóvenes Creadores grant for a science fiction short story collection. Some of these stories have been published in ''Samovar'', ''Tierra Adentro,'' and ''Alucinadas IV'', a Spanish anthology. The short story collection ''Un año de servicio a la habitación'' was published by UDG in 2019, and won the National Juan José Arreola Literature Prize. In that same year, Chapela received the Gilberto Owen National Prize for Literature in Mexico for the short story collection ''Ansibles,'' ''perfiladores y otras máquinas de ingenio''. The book was published by Almadía in 2020. According to
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, "These ten stories take place in futures where a collection of devices like pings, ansibles, lenses, profilers, or sensory curtains—some of these installed within the human body—allow people to link their minds in a digital cloud, share their thoughts and memories, filter their perceptions, or calculate the success of a romance while they eat basket tacos or navigate the streets of a Mexico City that is completely covered by water. With devastating intelligence, Andrea Chapela confronts her protagonists with realities where scientific knowledge, cutting-edge technology, and daily life interact in ways that are increasingly intricate and inevitable, so that even in the privacy of their minds, the voice of their own conscience no longer reigns."


Nonfiction

Chapela regularly contributes to literary magazines like ''Principia Magazine, Este País, Literal Magazine, Vaso Cósmico,'' and ''Tierra Adentro.'' Her essay collection ''Grados de miopía'' he Visible Unseenwon the José Luis Martínez National Prize in Mexico for essays by young writers. The book is a lyrical essay, published by Tierra Adentro in fall 2019. Luis Jorge Boone of Tierra Adentro says of the collection: " hapela'smethod is exchanging lyrical doubt with personal experimentation, allowing knowledge to become a metaphor and everyday experiences to mark the course of curiosity.”


Publication in English Translation

In 2022,
Restless Books Restless Books is an independent, non-profit publisher located in Brooklyn, New York. Restless publishes "international works of fiction, journalism, memoirs, travel writing, and illustrated books." The press published 15-20 titles a year, includ ...
published ''The Visible Unseen'', an English translation by Kelsi Vanada of Chapela's essay collection ''Grados de miopía.'' The book received a starred review from
Kirkus ''Kirkus Reviews'' (or ''Kirkus Media'') is an American book review magazine founded in 1933 by Virginia Kirkus (1893–1980). The magazine is headquartered in New York City. ''Kirkus Reviews'' confers the annual Kirkus Prize to authors of fic ...
, which summarized it as "philosophical meditations graced by radiant prose." Terrance Hayes called it "a lyrical laboratory of thinking and feeling. It’s an uncanny memoir of inner and outer perceptions" while literary translator Julia Sanches wrote: “A gimlet-eyed meditation on the dovetailing of science, the self, and written expression, ''The Visible Unseen'' jolted me. Andrea Chapela is an exquisite new voice in the hands of a superlative translator.” Some of the poems from Chapela's MFA thesis have been translated into English and published in the Brooklyn Rail InTranslation, and selections of her nonfiction and science fiction have also been published in English translation, including the short story "The Person You are Trying to Reach is Not Available." The first essay in her nonfiction collection ''Grados de miopía'' was published in English translation in the journal ''Tupelo Quarterly''. Her short story "Borromean Rings" was translated by Kelsi Vanada and published in '' Granta''.


Honors and awards

Chapela has received several prizes, among them the National Gilberto Owen Literature Prize for Stories in 2018, the National Juan José Arreola Literature Prize in 2019, and the National Joven José Luis Martínez Essay Prize in 2019. In 2021, she was named by '' Granta'' magazine as one of the best young writers in the Spanish language.


Works

* ''La heredera'' (Book 1 of the tetralogy ''Vâudïz''), 2008 * ''El creador (Book 2 of the tetralogy Vâudïz),'' 2009 * ''La cuentista (Book 3 of the tetralogy Vâudïz),'' 2012 * ''El cuento (Book 4 of the tetralogy Vâudïz),'' 2015 * ''Un año de servicio a la habitación,'' 2019 * ''Grados de miopía,'' 2019 * ''Ansibles,'' ''perfiladores y otras máquinas de ingenio,'' 2020 * ''The Visible Unseen'', tr. Kelsi Vanada, 2022 (English translation of ''Grados de miopía)''


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Chapela, Andrea Mexican writers Living people 1990 births