All Events for this artist

Arequipa 2024

Gabriela Wiener in conversation with Liliana Colanzi, with the participation of Renata Flores

South to south conversations

Arequipa 2024, 
The acclaimed and award-winning writer and journalist Gabriela Wiener will talk to Liliana Colanzi about her most recent novel. Wiener is the author of books such as Sexographies, Nine Moons, Llamada perdida, Dicen de mí and Undiscovered. Her new book, Atusparia, presents us with the story of a left-wing politician, a victim of lawfare, imprisoned in a high-security jail in the Amazon rainforest. There, capitalism launches an attack on her ideals, submerging her in a whirlwind of drugs and sex that leads her to undertake an introspective journey to Lake Titicaca, in imitation of her childhood hero. This posindigenista novel exposes hierarchies and power struggles as the forces that undermine the emancipatory movements. With the participation of the musician Renata Flores, famous for fusing Andean music with trap, hip-hop and pop styles, and for writing lyrics in Quechua.
Gabriela Wiener in conversation with Liliana Colanzi, with the participation of Renata Flores

Hay Festival 2026

Liliana Colanzi and Eduardo Halfon talk to Ángel Gurría-Quintana

South to North Conversations: Language, Memory and Community in the Face of Disaster

Hay Festival 2026, 

Bolivian writer Liliana Colanzi and Guatemalan author Eduardo Halfon discuss the ideas of collapse, language, kinship and memory that show up in both of their works, with literary journalist and translator Ángel Gurría-Quintana.

Colanzi’s short stories (You Glow in the Dark, Our Dead World) build eerie dystopian landscapes out of the decimated ruins of post-nuclear Latin America, in a style that feels both very real and completely otherworldly. Guatemalan writer Halfon’s Tarantula explores the traumatic childhood episode of two brothers in an immersive Jewish camp that ends up turning into a militarised nightmare. Halfon was named one of the 39 most promising young Latin American writers by Hay Festival in Bogotá.

Liliana Colanzi and Eduardo Halfon talk to Ángel Gurría-Quintana

Hay Festival 2026

Liliana Colanzi and Hanna Limulja talk to Polly Russell

Dreaming of Resistance: Indigenous Cultures in the Face of Collapse

Hay Festival 2026, 

How can ancient cultures open up our senses and help us dream of a better collective future? Bringing together ideas, traditions and perspectives from indigenous cultures, Brazilian anthropologist Hanna Limulja considers how dreaming is a form of indigenous resistance and hope while Bolivian writer Liliana Colanzi reflects on how environmental devastation and neoliberal violence threaten to create a dreamless future. They talk to British Library curator Polly Russell.

In You Glow in the Dark, Colanzi imagines eerie, post-nuclear futures where survival and postcolonial revolution are the norm, while Limulja’s work focuses on how dreams have been part of the territorial and cultural struggle of the Yanomami people.

Liliana Colanzi and Hanna Limulja talk to Polly Russell

Querétaro 2023

Liliana Colanzi and Socorro Venegas in conversation with Lola Larumbe

My friends the bookshops. Stories of love (and one or two about falling out)

Querétaro 2023, 

Spaces for buying and selling, socialisation and discovery, bookshops are also the subjects of literature and for interpretation. Often readers create strong links with their local bookshops, and these links develop into relationships that can last a lifetime. From this personal, almost intimate, perspective, three writers and a bookseller will talk about the love created, as well as the fallings out that can also happen on the way. With Liliana Colanzi and Socorro Venegas in conversation with Lola Larumbe.

Liliana Colanzi and Socorro Venegas in conversation with Lola Larumbe

Querétaro 2023

Liliana Colanzi in conversation with Dahlia de la Cerda

Querétaro 2023, 

Liliana Colanzi (Bolivia) has a doctorate in Comparative Literature from Cornell University, where she now lectures. In 2015 she won the Aura Estrada Prize and in 2017 she was selected for the Bogotá39 list of 39 of the best Latin American fiction writers aged under 40. She has a publishing project in Bolivia called Dum Dum, is the author of the books of short stories Vacaciones permanentes and Nuestro mundo muerto. Her last work is Ustedes brillan en lo oscuro, a collection of stories that explore narratives through time and space on the exuberant historical and geographical riches of Latin America, a book that won the Ribera del Duero Prize. In conversation with the fiction writer and essayist Dahlia de la Cerda.

Liliana Colanzi in conversation with Dahlia de la Cerda

Arequipa 2024

Liliana Colanzi in conversation with Verónica Ramírez

You shine in the dark

Arequipa 2024, 
Liliana Colanzi (Bolivia) won the 2015 Aura Estrada Prize and in 2017 she was selected for the Bogotá39 list of the 39 best Latin American fiction writers aged under 40. She has a publishing project in Bolivia called Dum Dum and she is the author of the books of short stories Vacaciones permanentes and Nuestro mundo muerto. Her latest book is Ustedes brillan en lo oscuro (Ribera del Duero Prize), a collection of short stories that explore the narrative through time and space of the exuberant historical and geographical riches of Latin America. She has a doctorate in Comparative Literature from Cornell University, where she currently lectures. In conversation with Verónica Ramírez.
Liliana Colanzi in conversation with Verónica Ramírez

Hay Festival 2018

Liliana Colanzi, Felipe Restrepo Pombo and Carlos Fonseca

Fictions: Bogotà 39

Hay Festival 2018, 

This is the first of two sessions introducing the most exciting voices of Latin American fiction, stars of the 2018 selection for Bogotà 39 and launching the English-language edition of a globally published anthology. Colanzi is a Bolivian short story writer and editor whose work includes the collection Our Dead World. Restrepo Pombo is the editor of Gatopardo magazine and of the anthology The Sorrows of Mexico. His fiction appears in the Bogotà 39 Anthology. Fonseca was born in Costa Rica and grew up in Puerto Rico. His novel Colonel Lagrimas is available in English. They read and talk to Daniel Hahn.

Cartagena 2018

Liliana Colanzi, Lola Copacabana, Eduardo Rabasa, Mariana Torres and Diego Zúñiga in conversation with José Hamad

Bogotá39-2017. Amphibious writers II

Cartagena 2018, 

Four authors who combine writing with other occupations, in this case publishing, journalism and academia, talk about what it means to move between the different worlds in which they live and work. They will also talk about their latest books with the publisher José Hamad. Liliana Colanzi (Bolivia), Eduardo Rabasa (Mexico), Mariana Torres (Brazil) and Diego Zúñiga (Chile).

Liliana Colanzi, Lola Copacabana, Eduardo Rabasa, Mariana Torres and Diego Zúñiga in conversation with José Hamad