Beatriz de Moura, historical editor and founder of Tusquets, dies aged 87 after information about her family Vanguard.
De Moura (Río de Janeiro, 1939) was born into a landed family. Her father, Altamir, was a diplomat and was sent to Ecuador in 1940, where the little girl learned Spanish to see her through World War II, through Algeria, the Vatican and Chile.
Learning Spanish by following his father in his diplomatic destiny, De Moura’s love story through books begins with tragedy. Elsa, her mother, suffering from epilepsy, committed suicide at the age of 20. It was then that the young girl, who immediately received her father’s attention, which was alien to her and felt like torture, found refuge in fiction.
She became a history buff. Flaubert, Victor Hugo, Voltaire, Baudelaire, Stendhal and Albert Camus turned into their great aliases and confidants. “I’d like to read it all for her to read in the most chaotic way,” I said later.
In 1956, the future editor’s father was appointed Consul General of Brazil in Barcelona, and the family moved to the city when Beatriz was 17 years old. He studied at the School of Translators and Interpreters in Ginebra and learned Spanish, English, French and Italian as well as Portuguese through his father’s work.
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