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Alarcón, Daniel, 1977-

LC control no.n 2004040210
Descriptive conventionsrda
LC classificationPS3601.L333
Personal name headingAlarcón, Daniel, 1977-
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Associated placeOakland (Calif.)
Birmingham (Ala.)
New York (N.Y.)
Iowa City (Iowa)
Addressdga5@columbia.edu contacto@radioambulante.org
Birth date1977-03-05
Place of birthLima (Peru)
AffiliationColumbia University, Department of Anthropology
MacArthur Fellows Program
University of Iowa
University of California, Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism
Columbia University, Graduate School of Journalism
Radio Ambulante
Profession or occupationJournalist Professor Novelist Short story author Radio producer Anthropologist
Found inAlarcón, Daniel. War by candlelight, 2005: CIP t.p. (Daniel Alarcón)
Email from publisher, Apr. 15, 2004 (Daniel Alarcón; born March 5, 1977; this is his first book)
Radio ciudad perdida, 2007: front flap (born 1977 in Lima and raised in the United States; currently lives in Oakland, California)
Columbia University website, February 13, 2023: (Daniel Alarcón; Daniel G. Alarcon; born in Lima, Peru in 1977; his family moved to a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama when he was a toddler because his parents were physicians who joined the faculty of the University of Alabama; bachelor's in anthropology, Columbia University (1999); master's in creative writing, University of Iowa (2004); investigative reporting fellow of the University of California Berkeley's Graduate Journalism School (2012-2013); named a MacArthur Fellow in 2021; short story author; novelist; professor affiliated with the School of Journalism; journalist who founded Radio Ambulante; wife is Carolina Guerrero (originally from Colombia); has links to his Twitter page and the Radio Ambulante website; dga5@columbia.edu; author of Guerra en la penumbra (2005), Radio ciudad perdida (2007), War by candlelight (2005), and Lost city radio (2007))
   <https://journalism.columbia.edu/faculty/daniel-alarc%C3%B3n>
   <https://provost.columbia.edu/news/faculty-reflections-daniel-alarcon>
   <https://magazine.columbia.edu/article/daniel-alarcon-tells-stories-without-borders>
   <https://globalcenters.columbia.edu/events/catedra-abierta-en-homenaje-roberto-bolano-radio-ambulante-como-narrar-un-continente-o-morir>
   <https://ilas.columbia.edu/content/journalism>
Radio Ambulante website, February 13, 2023: (Daniel Alarcón; executive producer; covers Latin America for The New Yorker; author of four works of fiction including The king Is always above the people; currently a professor of journalism at Columbia University; contacto@radioambulante.org)
   <https://radioambulante.org/sobre-nosotros#staff>
Author's Twitter page, February 13, 2023: (Daniel Alarcón)
   <https://twitter.com/DanielGAlarcon>
MacArthur Foundation website, February 13, 2023: (Daniel Alarcón; writer; radio producer; author of the novels Lost city radio (2007) and At night we walk in circles (2013) and the work of short stories The king Is always above the people (2017); co-founded the Spanish-language podcast Radio Ambulante (2012); editorial director of the Spanish weekly news podcast El hilo (https://elhilo.audio/); he joined the faculty of Columbia University in 2014)
   <https://www.macfound.org/fellows/class-of-2021/daniel-alarcon#searchresults>
El Hilo website, February 13, 2023: (Daniel Alarcón; editorial director)
   <https://elhilo.audio/sobre-nosotros/>
Babbel Magazine website, February 13, 2023: (Daniel Alarcón; Peruvian-American novelist; translated The book of Emma Reyes from Spanish; author of Lost city radio and The king Is always above the people; host of the podcast Radio Ambulante; wife is Carolina Guerrero and has a link to their interview with her)
   <https://www.babbel.com/en/magazine/the-book-of-emma-reyes>
   <https://www.babbel.com/en/magazine/interview-with-ceo-of-radio-ambulante>
The king Is always above the people, 2017: title page (Daniel Alarcón) table of contents (chapters include The ballad of Rocky Rontal and República and Grau)
   <https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_King_is_Always_Above_the_People/UmA9DwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&printsec=frontcover>
Library of Congress website, February 13, 2023: (Daniel Alarcón; author of The secret miracle (2010) and Lost city radio; information provided by the publisher)
   <http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy1102/2009028330-b.html>
War by candlelight, 2005: title page (Daniel Alarcón) table of contents (two of his stores are Absence and City of clowns)
   <https://www.amazon.com/War-Candlelight-Daniel-Alarcon/dp/0007196733?asin=0007196733&revisionId=&format=4&depth=1>
Confluenze (journal published by the Dipartamento di Lingue e Lettature of the Università di Bologna), vol. 3, no. 1, 2011: page 164, etc. (Daniel Alarcón; born 1977 in Lima, Peru; family moved to Alabama when he was three; author of the short story Ausencia (included in B 39 : antología de cuento latinoamericano) and the book Lost city radio; writes for The New Yorker; article is written in Spanish)
   <https://issuu.com/literaturadefronteras/docs/tala__pamela.__imaginarios_de_la_mi>
Library of Congress catalog, February 13, 2023: (Daniel Alarcón; his work República and Grau is included in Denominación de origen : Perú : antología de cuento (2014))
   <https://catalog.loc.gov/vwebv/search?searchArg=2016392844&searchCode=GKEY%5E*&searchType=0&recCount=25&sk=en_US>
El código García, 2020: title page (Daniel Alarcón) page 9 (his essay ¿Qué llevó el expresidente de Perú a quitarse la vida? is a translation of his article Executive decision (The New Yorker, July 8-15, 2019; https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/07/08/what-led-perus-former-president-to-take-his-own-life)) page 171 (born 1977; host of Radio Ambulante)
Associated languageeng spa