Fernando J. López del Oso Was born in Madrid in 1974 and graduated in Biology.He became interested in travel and ecotourism, designing travel packages for some of the most exclusive travel agencies. He also started contributing to the magazine Enigmas. He is the author of the travelogue Un viaje mágico por Egipto (“A Magical tour of Egypt”) and the essay La sexta extinción (“The sixth extinction”). El templo de la luna, which received the Minotauro Prize in 2009, is his first novel.
Professor of art history at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid and prestigious specialist in 16th and 17th century art and architecture, Fernando Marías was the disciple of G. C. Argan y A. E. Pérez Sánchez and has received grants from important Spanish and international institutions, such as the J. Paul Getty Trust and the CASVA of the National Gallery of Washington.
Fernando Martínez Laínez is a well known Spanish journalist and historian, who has worked as a foreign correspondent in many different countries.
Fernando Montero is assistant editor of Emprendedores, he has also worked with IPMARK and OTR Press. He is the author of Newspaper and Magazine Marketing and the Creative Journalism Blog (blogdeperiodismocreatico.wordpress.com).
They are co-authors of Business According to Homer Simpson and The Kama Sutra in the Company (published by Gestión, 2000).
The Fire in the Shadows is above all a multidisciplinary work: text, graphics, music, acting, design, makeup etc. The writer Fernando Morillo, winner of numerous literary prizes in the Basque Country and Spain, interweaves the strands of this driving shadow-filled story about characters from Basque mythology. Alongside him is the internationally renowned photographer Xanti Rodriguez, creator of a set of exceptional images full of dynamism and force. His collection of international awards attest to the heights being attained by his ability.
(Valencia, 1964). After gaining a degree in law Navarro García worked first in the private sector and later for humanitarian organisations, combining his work with university teaching. In 2001 he co-ordinated a humanitarian project in Angola, which was going through a long and bloody war. He is currently head of Academic Relations at Action against Hunger, and professor at various universities. This is the first book in a historic series on totalitarianim developed by Sepha as part of its collection Flores de Mal, which Navarro García edits.