
Synopsis
When does a fairy tale come true? When does reality become a story? Perhaps this happens when a shy girl, who feels invisible, trapped in her insecurity and marked by absences, faces life and, without intending to, finds love. She has hair that dances with the wind. He watches her thoughtfully. Their eyes meet, their hearts scream the desire to be together. They know each other, set a date to see each other, to see if they manage to live that famous fairy tale that everyone talks about, but she doesn't make it to the appointment ... The game of love is complicated. The closer to perfection, the more it seems like a dream. Perhaps only the magic of a love like yours can explain why dreams are confused with reality. Now she must decide, sleep, wake up or just daydreaming?

Karla Medina
Karla Medina is a conductor, writer, dubbing actress and Mexican singer. Born on June 29, 1984 in Monterrey, Mexico. She is the dubbing actress of Gamora, character of the Guardians of the Galaxy, and is known for being a Disney driver.
Among his works are:
Dreaming awake
Salt Moon
Dear Diego, Quiela hugs you
Synopsis
Angelina Belfo, Russian exile, an incipient painter, writes from the gray, cold and poverty of the postwar country. To Diego Rivera, his partner for ten years, whom he has not been able to follow on his return to Mexico. Angelina Belfo writes letters.

Elena Poniatowska
Hélène Elizabeth Louise Amélie Paula Dolores Poniatowska (Paris, May 19, 1932), is a writer, journalist and activist born in France and based in Mexico during World War II. His most recognized work is "La Noche de Tlatelolco", a collection of accounts about the massacre in the Plaza de Tlatelolco on October 2, 1968.
Synopsis
Loaded with irony and a unique look, Jorge Ibargüengoitia exhibits in this collection of texts the inexplicable logic behind life in this country: the ridiculous rituals of bureaucracy; how extraordinarily useless national technology is; the endless examination of conscience that a common citizen has to do before deciding who to vote for; and the peculiar ways of Mexicans to give bad news or present two strangers. In Mexico, the absurd is revealed as an everyday thing. Instructions for living in Mexico is a splendid example of the critical and humorous capacity of an essential author for Spanish-American literature.

Jorge Ibargüengoitia
Jorge Ibargüengoitia was born in Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico, on January 22, 1928; and died in Madrid on November 26, 1983. Ibargüengoitia, playwright, narrator, translator, essayist and journalist.
The Burning Plain
Synopsis
This collection contains 17 stories published by Juan Rulfo from 1945, when it appears We have been given land in the magazines America and Pan. Rulfo comments on the stories he continues to write in letters to his girlfriend Clara Aparicio. In 1951 the seventh is published in America, Tell them not to kill me (Elías Canetti considered him one of the best in universal literature and Gunther Grass is another fan of it) Thanks to the first scholarship he receives from the Mexican Writers Center he can finish the eight that will appear with the previous ones in 1953, in the book titled - for another story - The Llano en llamas, dedicated to Clara. Two more stories, appeared in magazines in 1955, will be included in 1970. His stories were considered by Rulfo as his approach to Pedro Páramo, in particular Luvina. Enrique Vila Matas says that this is the best story I have read in my life. (Final text of the work established by the Juan Rulfo Foundation)

Juan Rulfo
Juan Rulfo was born on May 16, 1917 in Jalisco. Registered in Sayula, he lived part of his childhood in the town of San Gabriel. As a writer, Rulfo appropriated the experiences that tear the precarious family order: war, dispossession, orphanhood; and of its region of origin, whose immediate environment was that of the haciendas and the countryside destroyed by the violence of the Revolution and the Christianity. However, the true life of Juan Rulfo is in his work: the author was essentially a goldsmith who allowed literature to go back to unpublished dimensions for his time.
Novelist, storyteller, photographer and editor, Rulfo is recognized, above all, for his volume of stories El llano en llamas (1953) and his first novel Pedro Páramo (1955).
Juan Rulfo died in Mexico City on January 7, 1986. Since then, he remains one of the most widely read Mexican writers in his country and abroad; his titles have been translated into dozens of languages and his work - literary and photographic - remains the subject of countless studies, tributes and reappropriations.
Mexican Poetry Bus
Synopsis
A bus train is one that carries carriages of all kinds and stops at all stations. Thus, this one, which includes samples of the exceptional poetic wealth of Mexico, has been traveling since the fourteenth century and ventures into indigenous poetry and popular poetry, without missing the New Spain, Romantic, Modernist and contemporary poets. Indigenous poetry: cora, chinanteco, huichol, lacandón, maratino, peninsular maya, mazateco, mixe, mixteco, nahuatl, otomí, quiche, seri, tarahumara, tarasco, tzotzil, yaqui, zapoteco, zaque. Popular poetry: sayings, spells, prayers, lullabies, tongue twisters, riddles, children's games, old romances, songs, songs under the Inquisition, policies, weapons, country and suburbs, romantic and modernist, improvisations, skulls, glosses, parodies , truck and latrine signs, innocent poetry. New Spain, romantic, modernist and contemporary poets: from Gutierre de Cetina to José Carlos Becerra, passing through Ixtlilxóchitl, Sigüenza and Góngora, Landívar, Pagaza, Díaz Mirón, Tablada, López Velarde, Reyes, Pellicer, and many others. La Suave Patria, The toast of the Bohemian, Netzahualcóyotl, Agustín Lara, Latin poets, Octavio Paz, Sor Juana, Riva Palacio, La Adelita; poetry of Tabasco, Sinaloa, Querétaro, California, New Mexico; love, ritual, political, obscene, religious, patriotic poetry; Ideographic poems, literary toys, poetry written on the walls, poetry for singing and dancing, tributes, rants, satires, hymns, corridos, and so on. Really, a complete trip with all the baggage that the reader will fully enjoy.

Gabriel Zaid
He was born in Monterrey, Nuevo León, on January 24, 1934. Poet and essayist. He has been a member of the board of the magazine Vuelta (1976-1992); of the Mexican Academy of Language (1986-2002) and El Colegio Nacional since 1984. Collaborator of the Library of Mexico, Cuadernos del Viento, Dialogues, Literary Life, Plural Free Letters, Fine Arts Magazine, and Vuelta. First place Floral Games of Tehuacán 1954 by Fable of Narcissus and Ariadne. Award Xavier Villaurrutia 1972 for Reading poetry. 1985 Magda Donato Award for Poetry in practice. Approved in multiple national and foreign publications. Part of his work has been translated into several languages.
-Daydream 🌻🌻
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