The number 555 of Humberto I Street in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of San Telmo is indelibly engraved in the History of publishing, both that of Argentina and that of the entire field of Spanish. It was there that the publishing house founded by a group of Argentine intellectuals and Spanish exiles was established in 1939: Victoria Ocampo, Carlos Mayer, Oliverio Girondo, Alfredo González Garaño and Rafael Vehils. This is how the Editorial Sudamericana was born with the purpose of making South American authors known and, at the same time, translating and disseminating contemporary foreign literature. After verifying their incompetence as entrepreneurs, the group of founders trusted in the choice of Vehils who, in order to carry out the project, sought an experienced publisher, Antonio López Llausás, who had left Spain because of the Civil War and who was in charge of the company unti...read more