Antonio Vera Ramírez
Antonio Vera Ramírez (2 July 1934 – 29 July 2024) was a Spanish author who wrote about factual scientific subjects, but in various fictional styles, such as mystery, crime and romance, well-known as Lou Carrigan, he also wrote under the pseudonyms Angelo Antonioni, Crowley Farber, Lou Flanagan, Anthony Hamilton, Sol Harrison, Anthony Michaels, Anthony W. Rawer, Angela Windsor and Giselle.[1]
Life and career
[edit]Vera Ramírez was born in Barcelona on 2 July 1934. He married Pepita Rodero Forga in 1958 and started to write.[2] He used pulp fiction and Anglicized words in his books, such as Moderno diccionario ilustrado de la lengua castellana,[3] Adios, good-bye, sayonara,[4] Poderes Ocultos de Los Seres Superiores[5] and Jardín siniestro[6] He wrote over 25 books, and also worked with Adriano Bolzoni to complete "No importa morir" in 1969.[7] Vera Ramírez died on 29 July 2024, at the age of 90.[8]
Filmography
[edit]- Four Candles for Garringo (1971)
- And the Crows Will Dig Your Grave (1971)
- Stagecoach of the Condemned (1970)
- Twenty Paces to Death (1970)
- La banda de los tres crisantemos (1970)
- Bridge Over the Elbe (1969)
- Estudio 3 (1965)
Bibliography
[edit]As Antonio Vera Ramírez
[edit]Non-fiction
[edit]- ¿Qué es el Opus Dei? (1993)
- Pregúntale a Lao Tse (1997)
- Pregúntale a Mahoma (1997)
- Pregúntale a Confucio (1998)
References
[edit]- ^ Person Antonio Vera Ramirez (in Spanish), tercerafundacion.net, retrieved 2009-09-02
- ^ Catorce parejas celebran hoy sus bodas de oro en las antiguas casas consistoriales (Fourteen couples celebrate their golden wedding anniversary today in the old town halls) (in Spanish), retrieved 2009-09-02
- ^ Ramírez, Antonio Vera (1989), Moderno diccionario ilustrado de la lengua castellana, Andrade, ISBN 9788487418006, retrieved 2009-09-02
- ^ Ramírez, Antonio Vera (1974), Adios, good-bye, sayonara, Ediciones Petronia, retrieved 2009-09-02
- ^ Ramírez, Antonio Vera (2008), Poderes Ocultos de Los Seres Superiores, Lulu.com, ISBN 9781409240242, retrieved 2009-09-02
- ^ Ramírez, Antonio Vera (1996), Jardín siniestro, Vosa, ISBN 9788482189758, retrieved 2009-09-02
- ^ http://pagerankalert.com/paginas/show/5240[permanent dead link]
- ^ Migoya, Hernán (6 September 2024). "Lou Carrigan: el hombre que más teclas de emoción pulsó en la novela popular española". The Objective. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
External links
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