Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano, an icon of the Latin American left who chronicled the region's injustices in a career that spanned decades and crossed genres, died Monday at age 74. Galeano, whose 1971 essay "Open Veins of Latin America" is considered by many leftists to be the seminal history of the region, was hospitalized last week in the Uruguayan capital Montevideo, said officials at the CASMU hospital.
He had been suffering from lung cancer. Galeano's work blended various genres, including journalism, fiction, essays and the drawings he used to illustrate works such as "The Book of Embraces," a collection of vignettes charged with politics and lyrical prose.
He was known for chronicling the deep injustices of Latin America, but also for his love affair with the region's contrasts and culture, including a deep passion for football.
Born September 3, 1940, Galeano never finished high school, but learned the writing craft hanging out in Montevideo's old cafes, he said.
He began his journalistic career at 14 years old, publishing a caricature in the Socialist Party's weekly newspaper El Sol. He went on to become the editor of prestigious magazine Marcha in 1961, working under its founder, Carlos Quijano, to publish authors such as fellow Uruguayan great Mario Benedetti. When Uruguay's former president Juan Maria Bordaberry dissolved the constitution and installed a military-backed dictatorship in 1973, Galeano went into exile - first in Argentina, where he founded the literary review Crisis, and then in Spain.
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