MEXICO CITY.- Mexico’s President Felipe Calderon, left, stands with Silvia Lemus, right, widow of Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes, next to Fuentes’ coffin during his wake in Bellas Artes Palace in Mexico City, Wednesday, May 16, 2012. Fuentes, who played a dominant role in Latin America’s novel-writing boom by delving into the failed ideals of the Mexican revolution, died Tuesday in a Mexico City hospital. He was 83. AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo
MEXICO CITY.- A man kneels before the flag draped
casket of the late Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes during his wake in Bellas Artes
Palace in Mexico City, Wednesday, May 16, 2012. Fuentes, who played a dominant
role in Latin America’s novel-writing boom by delving into the failed ideals of
the Mexican revolution, died Tuesday in a Mexico City hospital. He was 83. AP
Photo/Eduardo Verduwake in Bellas Artes
Palace in Mexico City, Wednesday, May 16, 2012. Fuentes, who played a dominant
role in LatiAmerica’s novel-writing boom by delving into the faileeals of
the Mexican revolution, died Tuesday in a Mexico City hospital. He was 83. AP
Photo/Eduardo Verdugo.
In this Oct. 13, 2008 file photo, Brazil’s President
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, left, speaks to Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes, second
right, as Spain’s King Juan Carlos, second left, and Spanish Prime Minister Jose
Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, right, look on, after the Don Quijote de la Mancha
international prize ceremony in Toledo, Spain. Fuentes, Mexico’s most celebrated
novelist and among Latin Americas most prominent authors, died on May 15, 2012.
AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano, File.
MEXICO CITY.- In this Friday, June 10, 1983 file
photo Mexican diplomat and author Carlos Fuentes addresses Harvard University’s
graduates during Commencement Exercises, in Cambridge, Mass. Whatever they may
have thought of his politics, anyone lucky enough to have conversed with Carlos
Fuentes couldn’t help but be taken by his patrician good looks and his love
affair with language. Fuentes died in Mexico City Tuesday at the age of 83. AP
Photo/Sean Kardon.
MEXICO CITY.- In this March 24, 2009 file photo,
Spain’s Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero honors Mexican writer Carlos
Fuentes during the Gran Cruz Isabel La Catolica medal ceremony, one of the most
important distinctions given by the Spanish government to foreign personalities,
at the Moncloa Palace in Madrid, Spain. Fuentes, Mexicos most celebrated
novelist and among Latin America’s most prominent authors, died on May 15, 2012.
AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza.
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