Jordi Puntí i Garriga | |
Native Name: | Jordi Puntí |
Native Name Lang: | Catalan |
Birth Date: | 1967 7, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Manlleu, Barcelona |
Language: | Catalan |
Nationality: | Spanish |
Education: | Romance Philology |
Genre: | Novel |
Notableworks: | Maletes perdudes |
Awards: | Premi de la Crítica Serra d'Or 1988, Premi de la Crítica de narrativa catalana 2010, Premi Llibreter de narrativa 2010, Premi Lletra d'Or 2010, Premi Joaquim Amat-Piniella 2011, Premi Sant Jordi 2023 |
Jordi Puntí i Garriga (born 1967 in Manlleu, Barcelona)[1] is a Catalan language writer, columnist, and translator.
Puntí earned a degree in Romance Philology during the year 1991, and has since worked for various publishers (Edicions 62, Quaderns Crema, Columna Edicions) across various media (El País, El Periódico de Catalunya)[2]
His career as an author began with the publication of two books of short stories: Pell d'Armadillo (1988, winner of the Premi de la Crítica Serra d'Or), and Animals tristos (2002). Previously, he had translated the works of other authors, including Paul Auster, Daniel Pennac, and Amélie Nothomb. In 2006, Puntí served as editor of Quadern, a literary supplement published by the newspaper El País.[1]
In 2010, Puntí published Maletes perdudes, which received several awards (Crítica de la narrativa catalana, Lletra d'Or, Premi Llibreter) and has been translated to 16 languages. In 2011, he published Els Castellans, a volume that includes articles previously published in the Catalan magazine L'Avenç.
In 2006, Ventura Pons directed the film Wounded Animals, adapted from Puntí's book Animals tristos (Sad Animals).[3] In 2014, Puntí received a scholarship from the Cullman Center for writers. The scholarship enabled him to spend one year completing research at the New York Public Library, in preparation for a novel based on the figure of Xavier Cugat.[4]
In 2023, Puntí won the Sant Jordi novel Prize with the novel Confeti.[5]