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Peruvian literary great Alfredo Bryce Echenique dead at 87
Peruvian author Alfredo Bryce Echenique, a leading figure in Latin American literature, has died at the age of 87, the government-affiliated House of Peruvian Literature announced Tuesday.
Bryce shot to prominence with his 1970 post-modern masterpiece, "A World for Julius," a novel chronicling the lives of Lima's elite that drew on his own charmed but lonely childhood.
The book won Peru's National Literature Prize and became one of the country's best-loved works of fiction.
Bryce was considered Peru's greatest living author after the late Mario Vargas Llosa, a Nobel laureate who died last year.
"We mourn the passing of... Alfredo Bryce Echenique (1939–2026), one of the most representative voices of contemporary Peruvian literature," the House of Literature said.
Born into a family of bankers and descended from a president, Bryce was raised in a world of golf clubs and cocktail parties that contrasted sharply with the lot of Peru's Indigenous and mixed-race majority, from which the family's servants were drawn.
"Alfredo helped us discover a part of Lima..., of ourselves, that had to do with the great secrets that families keep," fellow Peruvian author Alonso Cueto said in an interview with N television channel.
Peru's presidency, on its X account, said "his pen... leaves an immense void but an eternal legacy."
- 'Famous at school' -
In a 2009 interview with AFP, the diminutive soft-spoken author said that he was a born storyteller, who revelled in having an audience at an early age.
"My classmates would wait for me to tell them a story. I told them with great wit and irony, and I became famous at school," he said.
He went into self-imposed exile in Europe in the 1960s to fulfill his dreams of becoming a writer.
"My mother would have wanted me to become a Peruvian Proust, she was mad about Proust and knew entire passages by heart," he told France's Le Monde daily in 2002.
His literary hero, however, was Stendhal, for the "emotion" his works packed.
He lived mainly in Spain and France, where he wrote and taught literature before returning home several decades later to Peru.
Class and identity would remain leitmotifs in his many award-winning novels and short stories, which blended humor with melancholy.
They include "Don't Wait for me in April" and "A Sad Guide to Paris."
Bryce lived his final years out of the public eye.
He is survived by a sister. He did not have children.
X.Karnes--AMWN