Ramón Amaya Amador

Honduran author
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Quick Facts
Born:
April 29, 1916, Olanchito, Hond.
Died:
Nov. 24, 1966, near Bratislava, Czech. [now in Slovakia] (aged 50)

Ramón Amaya Amador (born April 29, 1916, Olanchito, Hond.—died Nov. 24, 1966, near Bratislava, Czech. [now in Slovakia]) was a Honduran author known for his social novels, many of them historical in nature, and his politically charged nonfiction works.

Amaya Amador grew up outside of the Standard Fruit Company’s banana plantations in his native department of Yoro. As an adult, he spent time as a schoolteacher before working on the plantations himself. There he became politically involved and became a union organizer on behalf of the plantation workers.

He began his writing career as a journalist for the La Ceiba-based newspaper El Atlántico (“The Atlantic”) in the early 1940s. In 1943 Amaya Amador founded a weekly newspaper, Alerta (“Alert”), that served as a mouthpiece for the interests of the Honduran working class. His leftist views led to persecution by the regime of Gen. Tiburcio Carías Andino, and Amaya Amador fled to Guatemala in 1947. In exile he wrote his best-known work, Prisión verde (1950; “Green Prison”), a novel that depicts the exploitative working conditions of the typical Honduran banana plantation in the 1930s and ’40s.

Amaya Amador became known throughout Latin America as a prominent communist intellectual, and in 1954 he helped found a clandestine Honduran Communist Party. From 1954 he spent the rest of his life residing in Argentina and Czechoslovakia, with occasional short return trips to his home country when the changing political climate allowed it. He worked for a variety of progressive publications and wrote a number of historical novels (which were usually published posthumously), including El señor de la sierra (1987; “The Man from the Mountains”) and Con la misma herradura (1993; “With the Same Tool”), before dying in a plane crash at age 50.

Adam Augustyn