Rodrigo Souza Leão
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Rodrigo Antonio de Souza Leão (
Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro ( , , ; literally 'River of January'), or simply Rio, is the capital of the state of the same name, Brazil's third-most populous state, and the second-most populous city in Brazil, after São Paulo. Listed by the GaWC as a b ...
, 4 November 1965 – Rio de Janeiro, 2 July 2009) was a Brazilian journalist, musician, poet, writer and painter. Rodrigo de Souza Leão was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1965 and died in a psychiatric clinic in Rio in 2009, shortly after his extraordinary autobiographical novel ''All Dogs are Blue'' was published. Due to his mental fragility, Rodrigo de Souza Leão rarely left his house and yet he used social media, blogging and email a lot, becoming close friends with a large number of Brazilian writers and poets who hold him in high regard today. His death was marked by a flood of poems in homage. During his lifetime, Souza Leão was a prolific writer, publishing many books of poetry and co-founding and co-editing one of Brazil’s most important poetry magazines, ''Zunái''. Since his death, further works of fiction have been published to widespread acclaim. ''All Dogs are Blue'' has been adapted for the stage and his outsider art has been presented in an individual exhibition at Rio’s Museum of Modern Art, entitled ‘Everything Will be the Colour You Want it to Be’. ''"All Dogs are Blue"'', has been translated into English by Zoë Perry and Stefan Tobler and was published by
And Other Stories And Other Stories is an independent British book publisher founded in 2009, notable for being the first UK publisher of literary fiction to make direct, advance subscriptions a major part of its business model as well as for its use of foreign l ...
in 2013.


Bibliography


''"All Dogs are Blue"''
trans. Zoë Perry and Stefan Tobler. London:
And Other Stories And Other Stories is an independent British book publisher founded in 2009, notable for being the first UK publisher of literary fiction to make direct, advance subscriptions a major part of its business model as well as for its use of foreign l ...
, 2013. .


References


External links


Author's Website
1965 births 2009 deaths Writers from Rio de Janeiro (city) Brazilian journalists Male journalists Brazilian male poets 20th-century Brazilian painters 20th-century Brazilian male artists 20th-century Brazilian poets 20th-century Brazilian male writers 20th-century journalists {{Brazil-writer-stub