Tigre Juan Award
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Tigre Juan Award ( es, Premio Tigre Juan, links=no) is a Spanish literary award created in 1977 in honor of the novel ''Tigre Juan. El curandero de su honra'' by
Ramón Pérez de Ayala Ramón Pérez de Ayala y Fernández del Portal (9 August 1880, in Oviedo – 5 August 1962, in Madrid) was a Spanish writer. He was the Spanish ambassador to England in London (1931-1936) and voluntarily exiled himself to Argentina via Fr ...
. It is awarded to the best narrative work in Spanish published in the preceding year. It has had different sponsors: the founders, the Cervantes Bookstore, the Asturian Center, the City Council of
Oviedo Oviedo (; ast, Uviéu ) is the capital city of the Principality of Asturias in northern Spain and the administrative and commercial centre of the region. It is also the name of the municipality that contains the city. Oviedo is located ap ...
(1986–2009) and the Tribuna Ciudadana cultural association.


History

The award was conceived with the aim of rewarding the best unpublished
novella A novella is a narrative prose fiction whose length is shorter than most novels, but longer than most short stories. The English word ''novella'' derives from the Italian ''novella'' meaning a short story related to true (or apparently so) facts ...
– regardless of whether the author was established or unknown – with input from
Oviedo Oviedo (; ast, Uviéu ) is the capital city of the Principality of Asturias in northern Spain and the administrative and commercial centre of the region. It is also the name of the municipality that contains the city. Oviedo is located ap ...
cultural figures such as , Juan Benito Argüelles, , , Belarmino Álvarez Otero, Jaime Herrero, and Pepe Grossi (who all joined the Tribuna Ciudadana cultural association which was instituted three years later). It was presented for the first time at the Tigre Juan pub, located at Calle Mon No. 16, a meeting place for artists in the old area of Oviedo that was owned by Álvarez Otero, the award's first sponsor. In 1986, the Municipal Culture Foundation of the City Council took over the award, expanding its monetary prize and providing it with an organizational infrastructure in order to achieve a greater national presence. Four years later the bases of the contest were modified in order to reward the best first published narrative work, and made the award into the first one that supported, in addition to the author, the publisher who was taking a risk on a writer's first work. Its winners were generally young (although the 26th edition was won by 74-year-old filmmaker and novelist José Luis Borau). This second stage, in which the award achieved its greatest prominence, lasted until 2003. A new change in the bases led to awards from 2004 to 2007 for unpublished novels by established or well-known authors, but in 2008 it resumed the modality of awarding the best first narrative work in Spanish. The first endowment of this award was 100,000 pesetas; the 2009 award was €54,000 (€40,000 for the author and the rest for the publisher). The award was canceled in January and was delivered in May of the following year during the Oviedo Book Fair. In November 2009, citing the economic crisis as a reason, the city council announced that it was suspending its financing. Now the prize – a statuette inspired by an engraving by the Asturian artist Jaime Herrero and representing the character Tigre Juan – is given in the autumn and has no financial endowment. The award was given in 2010 and 2011 at the , and in 2012 at the Traslaburra restaurant in Oviedo.


Winners

* 1978, for ''Jonás'' (later published by KRK Ediciones) * 1979,
Luis Marañón Luis is a given name. It is the Spanish form of the originally Germanic name or . Other Iberian Romance languages have comparable forms: (with an accent mark on the i) in Portuguese and Galician, in Aragonese and Catalan, while is archaic ...
for ''Ojos en la noche'' (later self-published by the author) * 1980, for ''Jardín de Orates'' (later published by the Cervantes Bookstore and Ediciones del Serbal) * 1981, for ''Otras mujeres y Fabia'' (later published by Argos Vergara) * 1982, for ''Cosas de la transición'' (later published by Argos Vergara) * 1983, Santiago Araúz de Robles for ''La agonía florida de Carlos Brito'' (later published by Argos Vergara) * 1984, for ''La cruzada del perro'' (later published by Júcar) * 1985, for ''El cadáver bajo el jardín'' (later published by Júcar) * 1986, for ''El viaje del obispo de Abisinia a los Santuarios de la Cristiandad'' (later published by Júcar) * 1987, for ''Sasia la viuda'' (later published by Júcar) * 1988, Luis Sepúlveda for ''Un viejo que leía novelas de amor'' (later published by Júcar) * 1989, Antonio Belmonte for ''La armada invendible'' (later published by Júcar) * 1990, for ''Qué te voy a contar'', Anagrama * 1991, Francisco Casavella for ''El triunfo'', Versal * 1992,
Enriqueta Antolín Enriqueta Antolín Gimeno (1941 – 26 November 2013) was a Spanish journalist and writer, best known for her novels. Biography The descendant of a family deeply rooted in Palencia, Enriqueta Antolín moved to Toledo at age 6, where she lived a ...
for ''La gata con alas'', Alfaguara * 1993,
Belén Gopegui Belén Ruiz de Gopegui Durán (born 1963, in Madrid) is a Spanish novelist and screenwriter. Biography Gopegui is a Spanish novelist and essayist who has been hailed by contemporary critics as an unmissable and highly influential voice in Spa ...
for ''La escala de los mapas'', Anagrama * 1994, for ''Cuentos de un escritor sin éxito'', Pretextos * 1995, Ismael Grasa for ''De Madrid al cielo'', Anagrama * 1996, for ''Los seres heridos'', Ediciones Nobel * 1997, for ''Fabulosas narraciones por historias'', Lengua de Trapo * 1998,
Imma Monsó Imma Monsó (born in 1959 in Lleida, Catalonia) is a Spanish fiction writer. Monsó is known mainly for her humorous and poignant novels and for blending an absurdist wit with a profound tenderness for her very singular characters. Monso is gra ...
for ''Nunca se sabe'', Tusquets * 1999, Fernando Palazuelos for ''La trastienda azul'', Lengua de Trapo * 2000, Rodrigo Brunori for ''Me manda Stradivarius'', Debate * 2001,
Pablo Tusset Pablo Tusset (born 1965) is a Spanish writer. Tusset was born in Barcelona. In 2001 he published ''The Best Thing That Can Happen to a Croissant'' (original title: ''Lo mejor que le puede pasar a un cruasán''), which won the Tigre Juan Award T ...
for ''Lo mejor que le puede pasar a un cruasán'', Lengua de Trapo * 2002,
Manuel Moyano Manuel Moyano (born 1963) is a Spanish writer. Born in Cordoba, he grew up in Barcelona. He studied agricultural engineering at the University of Cordoba. Since 1991, he has lived in Molina de Segura in Murcia. His first book ''El amigo de Kafka ...
for ''El amigo de Kafka'' (short stories), Pretextos * 2003, José Luis Borau for ''Camisa de once varas'' (short stories), Alfaguara * 2004, for ''El sueño de Borges'' (later published by Algaida) * 2005,
Raúl Argemí Raúl Argemí (1946–present) is an Argentinean writer, resident of Buenos Aires, after 12 years living in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. He is a crime writer. His work has garnered diverse awards in Spain, amongst them the Dashiell Hammett awar ...
for ''Siempre la misma música'' (later published by Algaida) * 2006,
Esther Bendahan Esther Bendahan Cohen (Tétouan, 1964) is a Moroccan-Spanish writer. Her Moroccan Jewish family went to Madrid when she was a child, in this city she studied Psychology and French Literature. She is the director of the television program ''Shalom ...
for ''La cara de Marte'' (later published by Algaida) * 2007, for ''Niños de tiza'' (later published by Algaida) * 2009,
Óscar Calavia Oscar or Oskar is a masculine given name of Irish origin. Etymology The name is derived from two elements in Irish: the first, ''os'', means "deer"; the second element, ''car'', means "loving" or "friend", thus "deer-loving one" or "friend of deer" ...
for ''Las botellas del señor Klein'', Lengua de Trapo * 2010, for ''Bajo el influjo del cometa'' (short stories), Salto de Página * 2011, for ''Diarios, 1999-2003'', Pepita de Calabazas (finalist:
Óscar Esquivias Óscar Esquivias (born 28 June 1972 in Burgos, Castile and León, Spain) is a Spanish short-story writer, poet and novelist. Biography He studied at the University of Burgos. He was director of the literature magazine ''Calamar, revista de cre ...
with ''Pampanitos verdes'') * 2012,
Mario Martín Gijón Mario Martín Gijón (born 1979 in Villanueva de la Serena, Spain) is a Spanish writer, poet and literary critic. He holds a PhD in Spanish Philology and has taught at the Philipps University of Marburg (Germany) and the Masaryk University in B ...
for ''Inconvenientes del turismo en Praga y otros cuentos europeos'', KRK (finalist: with ''Ensimismada correspondencia'', Lengua de Trapo) * 2013, ''ex aequo'':
Marta Sanz Marta Sanz Pastor (born 1967, Madrid) is a Spanish writer. Her work includes the novels ''Susana y los viejos'' (nominated for the Premio Nadal Premio Nadal is a Spanish literary prize awarded annually by the publishing house Ediciones Destino ...
for ''Daniela Astor y la caja negra'', Anagrama and for ''La hora violeta'', Mondadori (finalist:
Yuri Herrera Yuri Herrera (born 1970) is a Mexican political scientist, editor, and contemporary writer. He currently teaches at Tulane University in New Orleans. Biography Yuri Herrera studied Political Science at the National Autonomous University of Me ...
for ''La transmigración de los cuerpos'', Periférica) * 2014, for ''Contarlo todo'', Mondadori (finalist:
Selva Almada Selva Almada (born 5 April 1973) is an Argentine writer of poetry, short stories, and novels. She expanded into nonfiction in 2014 with the book ''Chicas muertas''. Career Selva Almada studied Social Communication in Paraná, although she left ...
for ''Ladrilleros'', Mar dulce) * 2015,
Samanta Schweblin Samanta Schweblin (born 1978) is an Argentine Spanish-language author currently living in Berlin. She has published three collections of short stories, a novella and a novel, besides stories that have appeared in anthologies and magazines such as ...
for ''Distancia de rescate'' (finalist: for ''Sin música'') * 2016, for ''Nemo'' (finalist: Juan José Becerra for ''El espectáculo del tiempo'') * 2017,
Pedro Mairal Pedro Mairal (born 1970) is an Argentine novelist, poet and musician. He has published more than a dozen books, among them the novel ''La Uruguaya'' (English translation: ''The Woman from Uruguay'') which won the Tigre Juan Award in 2017. His work ...
for ''La uruguaya'' (finalist: for ''Kanada'') * 2018, for ''Años de mayor cuantía'' (finalist: Pablo Matilla for ''La sabiduría de quebrar huesos'')


References

{{Reflist, 30em 1977 establishments in Spain Awards established in 1977 Spanish literary awards