Imma Monsó published her first novel in 1996, to great acclaim from both critics and the public. The Spanish version Nunca se sabe, won the Premio Tigre Juan in 1997.
Inácio Vilariño is a graduate of fine Arts from the University of Vigo. He has been a member of the Institute for Traditional Literature Studies at the Universidad Nova in Lisbon (IELT) since 2006, working on the 'Grandepequeno' project and the exhibition: 'Grandepequeno: misérias, galinhas e cabeçudos'. He is currently a member of the puppet company Fantoches Baj, which he founded in 2006. From 2001 to the present, he has collaborated on various shows with the Galician theatre company Os Quinquillans.
Iñaki Ochoa de Olza (Pamplona, 1967- Annapurna, 2008) was a distinguished Spanish mountaineer who headed over 200 expeditions to the Himalayas, in which he managed to scale 15 eight-thousanders. Before he died due to a brain haemorrhage that immobilised him at 7,400 metres on Annapurna, he wrote 'Bajo los cielos de Asia', a book that reflects his extraordinary personality and provides the key to understanding why some of the world's best mountaineers undertook an epic five day rescue operation to try to save him.
Inés Bustos was initially trained in Argentina, where she studied a joint degree in Music Teaching and Speech and Language Pathology. She graduated in Pedagogy in Spain. She has published several books related to speech therapy, approaching issues to do with language, reading comprehension and voice. Some of her publications are:
Manual práctico de discriminación auditiva (2002): reprint. ICCE. Madrid.
Percepción auditiva, un enfoque transversal (2001): coordinator. ICCE. Madrid.
Iñigo Echenique (Vigo, 1957) is a naval engineer by trade and designs many different types of ships. A sailor who has been passionate about the sea from an early age, he has written a book of essays, 'Madeira de mar' (Ed. Galaxia, 2000) about 'gamelas', traditional Galician fishing boats. 'Las desventuras de Jonás Plum' is his first novel.