Campobello, Nellie, 1900-1986
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- Her Cartucho ; and, My mother's hands, 1988:CIP t.p. (Nellie Campobello) data sheet (b. 1909) book p. viii (In the parish church of Villa Ocampo lie the records of the birth of María Francisca, born on the 7th of April 1900, natural daughter of Rafaela Luna. Nellie invented more recent birthdays, 1907, 1909)
- LC data base, 8-5-87(hdg.: Campobello, Nellie)
- Las manos de mamá ; Tres poemas ; Mis libros, 1999:t.p. (Nellie Campobello) p. 4. of cover (1901-1986)
- Yo!, 1919:t.p. (Francisca)
- Francisca Yo!, 2004:p. 36+ (Nellie Campobello's first book of verses entitled Yo! was written under the pseudonym Francisca)
- Biography Resource Center, via WWW, July 19, 2006:(Nellie (Francisca Ernestina) Campobello; b. 1900, Mexico; d. July 9, 1986, Mexico City, Mexico)
Nellie (or Nelly) Francisca Ernestina Campobello Luna (November 7, 1900 – July 9, 1986) was a Mexican writer, notable for having written one of the few chronicles of the Mexican Revolution from a woman's perspective: Cartucho, which chronicles her experience as a young girl in Northern Mexico at the height of the struggle between forces loyal to Pancho Villa and those who followed Venustiano Carranza. She moved to Mexico City in 1923, where she spent the rest of her life and associated with many of the most famous Mexican intellectuals and artists of the epoch. Like her half-sister Gloria, a well-known ballet dancer, she was also known as a dancer and choreographer. She was the director of the Mexican National School of Dance.
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