Ana María Matute
- Died:
- June 25, 2014, Barcelona (aged 88)
- Awards And Honors:
- Cervantes Prize (2010)
- Notable Works:
- “Olvidado rey Gudú”
Ana María Matute (born July 26, 1925, Barcelona, Spain—died June 25, 2014, Barcelona) was a Spanish novelist known for her sympathetic treatment of the lives of children and adolescents, their feelings of betrayal and isolation, and their rites of passage. She often interjected such elements as myth, fairy tale, the supernatural, and fantasy into her works.
Matute’s education suffered because of childhood illnesses, the family’s frequent moves between Barcelona and Madrid, and the disruptions of the Spanish Civil War (1936–39), which left her family largely housebound in Barcelona. She broke the monotony of the war years by editing a magazine for her siblings. While in her teens, she published short stories and became a professional musician.
In her works Matute frequently used biblical allusions, notably the story of Cain and Abel, to symbolize the familial division caused by the Spanish Civil War. In 1948 she published her first novel, Los Abel (“The Abel Family”). She followed up with Fiesta al noroeste (1953; Celebration in the Northwest), the Planeta Prize-winning Pequeño teatro (1954; “Little Theatre”), and Los hijos muertos (1958; The Lost Children). Matute then wrote a trilogy consisting of Primera memoria (1959; U.K. title, Awakening; U.S. title, School of the Sun), about children thrust into an adult world by the Spanish Civil War; a war novel, Los soldados lloran de noche (1964; Soldiers Cry by Night); and La trampa (1969; “The Trap”), in which the children of Primera memoria are presented as adults. Matute set La torre vigía (1971; “The Watchtower”) in 10th-century Europe to examine the themes of chivalry, idealism, poverty, and prejudice. Her novel Olvidado Rey Gudú, a massive allegorical folk epic that spans four generations in the story of rulers, gnomes, witches, and other creatures in the mythical medieval kingdom of Olar, was published in 1996. Among her later works are Aranmanoth (2000) and Paraíso inhabitado (2008; “Uninhabited Paradise”).
(Read Sir Walter Scott’s 1824 Britannica essay on chivalry.)
In addition to the novels for which she is best known, Matute wrote several collections of short stories, including Los niños tontos (1956; “The Foolish Children”), Algunos muchachos (1968; The Heliotrope Wall), and La puerta de la luna: cuentos completos (2010; “The Door of the Moon: Complete Stories”). She also wrote several works for children and young adults. In 2010 she was named the recipient of the Cervantes Prize, the most prestigious literary award in the Spanish-speaking world.