Ediciones del Lirio
In this version 2023 of Book Fair of Frankfurt, the Mexican editorial Ediciones del Lirio has wished to participate on these books and culture global encounter.
View Rights PortalIn this version 2023 of Book Fair of Frankfurt, the Mexican editorial Ediciones del Lirio has wished to participate on these books and culture global encounter.
View Rights PortalNational Prize for Publishing 2011 Spanish Ministry of Culture Bologna Prize Best Children's Publisher of the year 2015
View Rights PortalThis book is a collection of stories where are treated some topics of the contemporary reality of Cuba. His author is Alfredo Galiano a cuban writer who won some important Literary Prizes like "Hermanos Loynaz", "Cirilo Villaverde" and the International Literary Prize "Premio de Relato Alfonso Sancho Sáenz".
On May of 1937, during the Spanish Civil War, 456 sons and daughters of republican fighters took the transatlantic boat Mexique, that set sail in Bordeau to arrive in Mexico. Previsions were that they would stay there three or four months, but the Republican defeat and the beginning of the Second World War changed that brief exile into a definitive one. This books tells the story not only of those children, but also about the ship, being aware that we do not know how many boats try to cross our oceans every day, moving human beings that have full rights to a proper way of living and not to stand over a land that tears apart below their feet.
No, Lautaro, don’t do that. No, don’t do that either. Please don’t, especially not that! This amazing book is about Lautario’s brief compendium before turning 5. It is written by his father, the world famous illustrator Dr. Alderete. This is a great opportunity to establish the limits of authority from a hilarious perspective.
Pedro Juan Gutiérrez an important cuban story teller, reveals through this book a group of interviews made to important writers and intelectuals from Cuba and the World as Gunter Grass or Mario Benedetti where they give intersting points of view concerning literature and society.
Here appear a group of narrations wich spin around Mayakosky, but in different latitudes, written with a universal language.
Book of poems written by the Miguel de Cervantes Awarded cuban poet Dulce María Loynaz.
The book is about different short stories with a social focus about the real life in Argelia and its public servants as main characters, as well as their conflicts.
It is a book of short stories written for Children by Nersys Felipe winner of the Casas de las Américas Literary Prize.
Poetry Book of Flor Loynaz, sister of Dulce María Loynaz and a very important figure of the literature of the beginning of the 20th century.
Book where the short stories are related and the author addresses realistic and social subjects in a very dynamic way and playing properly with some literary resources where the narrations get more interesting.
This book join a group of Literary Essays of Dulce María Loynaz.
Book of poems winner of the Literary Prize "Hermanos Loynaz" in 2020.
Book of poems winner of the Literary Prize "Hermanos Loynaz" in 2019.
Poetry Book of Carilda Oliver Labra National Literary Prize in Cuba.
In this book are revealed some interesting topics concerning the cuban baseball.
Poetry Book of Dulce María Loynaz written as a love letter to the Egiptian King Tut Ank Amon.
This book is a collection of stories where are treated some topics of the contemporary reality of Cuba where fiction and reality mix to reveal a peculiar and original point of view concerning humanity existence. His author is Emerio Medina a cuban writer who won some important Literary Prizes like "Hermanos Loynaz".
My city, your city... are they really so different? This book is the result to a raw visual critique of our society. Feelings and thoughts mix together to share this out-of-the-status proposal.
In Edinburgh, between the years 1827 and 1828, Mr. William Burke and Mr. William Hare committed a series of murders. Why did they do it? This is the story on Pablo Boneau's version.
It's 1879. To the north, Chile defends foreign investment in the Pacific War. To the south, beyond the already invaded Araucania, from a large, almost unexplored island, rumors of violence, superstition and a state incapable of enforcing its law spread. The elite would be at ease if some “elements” that are not occupied at the border with Peru penetrated Chiloé. They need evidence to condemn those criminals who terrorize the population with old indigenous beliefs. They call themselves witches. They are organized as La Recta Provincia or La Hermandad de la Casa Grande. They lie to scare and change the names of the cities on the island –Achao, Dalcahue or Quicaví–, confusing them with others: Buenos Aires, Villarrica, Salamanca. If they were only myths, it would be enough for the government to forget that secret place. But the one who calls himself the Greatest Liar in the World claims to have escaped the sorcerers and travels the north glimpsing the aliens: he talks to them of malice, monsters and murders; of the bloody clans' struggles to become a decaying reign. For these lies, or to secure an unstable national pride, coronels and tenants decide to put an end to things that a mortal has no power to finish.