Julio Cortázar posts
Los Angeles Times Sports In a 10-6 loss to Miami, Julio Urias took a pounding for the second start in row.
106 months ago
Los Angeles Times Sports The dilemma of Julio Urias pits his talent against his body.
106 months ago
Los Angeles Times Sports Julio Urias isn’t any pitcher.
108 months ago
Yahoo News Atlanta Falcons star Julio Jones honored a friend and a fan who died too young.
The meaning behind Julio Jones' blue bracelet
sports.yahoo.com
Julio Jones, who’d just staked a claim to the title of best receiver in the NFL, wore a small blue bracelet on his right wrist, a promise he’s keeping to a family in Alabama, a quiet way of honoring a friend and a fan who died far too young. Savo
Read more ... y Jones – no relation to Julio, though he surely would
109 months ago
Deadspin Julio Jones: Smooth Criminal
Julio Jones: Smooth Criminal
screengrabber.deadspin.com
Julio Jones hauled in a fantastic sideline catch en route to the Falcons’ second touchdown tonight—one viewers around the world felt deserving of the Moonwalker treatment.
109 months ago
Deadspin Julio Jones is a bad, bad man.
Julio Jones Is A Marvel
deadspin.com
Although the Atlanta Falcons’ 44-21 blowout of the Green Bay Packers wasn’t competitive, Julio Jones kept it entertaining. The wide receiver racked up 180 yards with two touchdowns Sunday as he humiliated the Packers’ defense.
110 months ago
The New Yorker Passed over during the Latin-American Boom, which made celebrities of Gabriel García Márquez and Julio Cortázar, the Argentinean writer Antonio Di Benedetto is finally getting his due.
A Neglected South American Masterpiece
newyorker.com
It took sixty years for Antonio Di Benedetto’s novel “Zama,” recognized in the Spanish-speaking world as a classic, to be translated into English.
110 months ago
Deadspin Just when you think Julio Jones has shown you everything, he does this.
123 months ago
The New York Times - Lens - Photography Hugo Passarello used social media to find participants willing to choose their favorite passages in Julio Cortázar’s celebrated novel "Hopscotch." Then, he took their portraits in the passage’s Paris location: http://nyti.ms/1zGfLut
Erica de Di
Read more ... os Morales, a Spanish teacher, chose the following passage:
"‘I feel so sorry for you, Horacio.’
‘Oh no; hold it right there.’
‘You know that sometimes I really can see. I see things so clearly. To think that an hour ago I thought the best thing to do would be go jump in the river.’
‘Body of an unidentified woman found in Seine… But you swim like a swan.’"
(Photo: Hugo Passarello)
133 months ago
The New York Times - Lens - Photography To mark the centennial of Julio Cortázar’s birth, Hugo Passarello took portraits of the Argentine’s writer’s fans and friends in Paris, the setting of his celebrated novel “Hopscotch.” http://nyti.ms/1zGfLut
(Photo: Hugo Passarello)
133 months ago
More Julio Cortázar posts »