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Josep Maria Beà

    An artist of precocious talent, he created his first comic at the tender age of four. His career, launched professionally soon after studies in Barcelona, includes seminal works such as 'Historias de taberna galáctica' and 'La esfera cúbica.' He became a pivotal figure during the 1980s 'comic boom,' co-founding the magazine Rambla and releasing works like 'La muralla' and 'En un lugar de la mente.' Beyond comics, his artistic ventures extend to film storyboards, science fiction novels, and digital design, cementing his global renown as a leading author of his generation.

    Paracuellos
    • 2001

      Paracuellos

      • 136 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      In the late 1930s when Spanish fascists led by Francisco Franco, and aided by Hitler and Mussolini, overthrew the democratically elected government, almost 200000 men and women fell in battle, were executed, or died in prison. Their orphaned children —and others ripped from the homes of the defeated— were shuttled from State and Church-run "Home" to "Home" and fed a steady diet of torture and disinformation by a totalitarian state bent on making them "productive" citizens. Carlos Giménez was one of those children. In 1975, after Franco's death, Carlos began to tell his story. Breaking the code of silence proved to be a milestone, both for the comics medium and for a country coming to terms with its past. Eurocomics is proud to present this log-awaited English translation of a comics masterpiece. Placing the comics in historical perspective are illustrated essays by Carmen Moreno-Nuño, Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies ant the University of Kentucky, and Antonio Martin, the foremost historian of Spanish comics.

      Paracuellos