Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 25. Chapters: Coral Bracho, Martin Solares, Myriam Moscona, Tomas Segovia, Natalia Toledo, Vicente Lenero, Angeles Mastretta, Adolfo Sanchez Vazquez, Alberto Perez-Gomez, Federico Fabregat, Ramon Xirau, Fernando del Paso, Alberto Arai, Mauricio Gonzalez de la Garza, German List Arzubide, Mario Ojeda Gomez, Minerva Bloom, Ermilo Abreu Gomez, Sergio Pitol, Clementina Diaz y de Ovando, Emilio Rabasa, Carlos Pellicer, Francisco Gonzalez Bocanegra, Carlos Montemayor, Sergio Witz, Natalio Hernandez, German Dehesa, Malva Flores, Federico Campbell, Salvador Borrego, Ruben Aguilar, Martin Luis Guzman, Guillermo Garcia Oropeza, Xhevdet Bajraj, Joaquin Lopez-Doriga, Luis Calderon Vega, Hector Aguilar Camin, Rodolfo Usigli, Miguel Angel Granados Chapa, Fabio Morabito, Isabel Vericat, Domingo Tirado Benedi, Arqueles Vela, Jorge Galvan, Axel Didriksson, Alejandro Rossi, Maria Dolores Perez Enciso, Ali Chumacero, Carlos Fuentes Lemus, Adolfo Wilhelmy, Pietro Ameglio, Guadalupe Loaeza, Helen Kleinbort Krauze, Mariana Frenk-Westheim, Juan Escoto, Alvaro Delgado, Juan Garcia Ponce, Ivan Figueroa, Eduardo Arellano Elias, Salvador Diaz Miron, Elizabeth Algravez, Paz Alicia Garciadiego, Ricardo Elizondo Elizondo, Vicky Nizri, Hermann Bellinghausen, Yolanda Vargas Dulche, Jorge Fernandez Menendez, Francesca Gargallo, Paco Ignacio Taibo I, Celso Aguirre Bernal, Manuel Maples Arce, Domenico Cieri, Roberto Bravo, Gonzalo Celorio, Juan J. Orosa, Jose Juan Tablada, Carlos Loret de Mola, Mario Menendez Rodriguez, Replicante, Gerardo Horacio Porcayo, Rowena Bali, Alicia Gironella D'Angeli. Excerpt: Coral Bracho (b. 1951, Mexico City) is a Mexican poet, translator, and doctor of Literature. Bracho is winner of the Aguacalientes National Poetry Prize in 1981 and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2000. She received the 2004 Xavier Villaurrutia Award for her book, Ese ...