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Stephanie Rendón de la Torre is a mexican writer, narrator, translator, musician, promoter of Mexican culture in Estonia, and data scientist. An early artist, with two published books; one in Mexico and one in Estonia. One book of short stories (fiction) and one of memoirs.

Biography
Stephanie Rendón de la Torre (Mexico City, 9 of March of 1985). She is the daughter of Mexican parents. Stephanie is the eldest of her siblings, Luis Alexis and Ingrid. She is a young novelist whose background as such draws from her childhood, as she herself notes in the prologue of her book, "Let the night come". She grew up surrounded by books, not just children's books, which she could freely access. She spent her teenage years and early adulthood attempting to write about her experiences, putting her imagination down on paper, intertwined with her numerous interests and activities that led her to become a woman of her time: interested in the world around her, in the things that happen, and the way in which these events affect the people who live through them.

"To be a writer is to say what one thinks, but above all, it is to think about what one writes, said the Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes. Likewise, the great poet Octavio Paz once said that one must write, write with audacity, vulgarity, beauty, terror, and dream. One must write with the heart on the sleeve. One must write to counterbalance silence and noise.

I have thought a lot about writing this, my first book, for several years, but I didn't know it yet. I started writing one of the stories in this book when I was twenty years old. Since then, and long before that, I have been an avid and incurable reader. In those early years of my introduction to the literary world, I discovered adventures that transported me to other times, other dimensions, other lands and realities, to be part of the honor among thieves and knights, or to explore galaxies and parallel futures written by Pérez-Reverte, Asimov, Salgari, Swift, Twain, Clarke, Poe, Bradbury, Verne, and Dumas. Today, I have a fascination for reading the works of Spanish-speaking writers: Borges, García Márquez, Carpentier, Fuentes, Asturias, Arreola, Cela, Saramago, Paz, Cortázar, Vargas Llosa, Ruy Sánchez, Pitol, and many more. Once you truly acquire a taste for reading and writing, it becomes inevitable and relentless.."

- Stephanie Rendón She studied a Bachelor's degree in Public Accounting and Finance at the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education, Mexico City campus. In 2014, she was awarded the "Alfonso Caso" medal and graduated "Cum Laude" from her Master's studies in Finance at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. She received special mention in the 2014 IMEF-EY Financial Research Competition. She obtained her Ph.D. in Physics from the Tallinn University of Technology (Estonia) in 2019,, where she has been lecturer at the undergraduate level. During her Ph.D., she received the Dora scholarship from the Archimedes Foundation and conducted research on complex networks and econophysics for the Tallinn University of Technology. . She wrote a chapter for the book Modern and Interdisciplinary Problems in Network Science, by Taylor & Francis Group in 2018. She has published ten research articles and has also worked as an editor, translator, and international speaker on topics related to science and literature. Currently, she resides in Tallinn, Estonia, where she works in the field of data science and also pursues her passion for writing literature. She has leaded and participate numerous music projects of different genres in the last 15 years, both in Mexico and in Estonia. She studied classical ballet, piano, and guitar for over a decade and considers herself a passionate writer who loves arts, sports, and nature.

She is married to Estonian cinematographer Tanel-Velli-Vällik, who is the grandson of the sound director Vambola Velli-Vällik.

Teekond Méxicost Setomaale is her first published work in Estonian language in Estonia by Hea Lugu publishing house in November 2022. . In this book written as an essay, the author recounts the adventures and misfortunes experienced as a Mexican immigrant in Estonia since her arrival in the country in 2014. The work explores the adoption of the process of seeking one's own identity from an autobiographical perspective and travel chronicles. . The author not only cultivates the essay genre, but also that of the novel and short story. She was a finalist in the Young Adult Novel Competition, 2022 organized by the Estonian Center for Children's Literature and Tänapäev publishing house for her novel Cinco segundos de luz. Her most recent publication (2023) was the book of short stories in Spanish Que venga la noche, published by the Mexican publishing house Editorial Libros de Godot. The book comprises thirteen stories that range from magical realism, science fiction, mystery, romance, classic horror, and comedy. The short story Memorias de un zorro is an ode to the Seto land in southern Estonia, for which the author feels a great love. The book has been presented in Estonia, Mexico, and Finland.

Recurrent topics in the author´s work
The theme of belonging is a recurring topic in the author's work. She emigrated to Estonia in 2014 and has traveled to more than 60 countries, and clearly, this internal struggle to belong to the new country and integrate into its culture, customs, while also commemorating her own roots, led her to write her works.

The author reflects on her experience of living in Estonia for almost a decade, which has left a distinct impression on her compared to before she moved there. After a few years in Estonia, just before getting married, she bought a wooden cabin—a house in the forest that belongs to the Seto land, in southern Estonia, right on the border with Russia. From one of the windows in the living room, one can clearly see the black and white pole that marks the Estonian border in the midst of the green thickness of the forest. A little further ahead, the red and green pole that marks the location of the border with Russia can be seen. From that rustic little house, she has witnessed the magical passing of the seasons and has written several stories for this book. The questioning of "them" or "us", in terms of belonging to a culture, is something that is explored in depth in her first work, Teekond Méxicost Setomaale. Regarding her second work Que venga la noche, most of her stories are influenced by writers from the Latin American Boom. The author has shown a particular interest in promoting Mexican culture in Estonia through her work.

"...“Pandora Centauri” and “Let the night come” are a sort of tribute to Bradbury, Asimov, and Clarke, whom I am a fervent admirer of. The story "Beware of the devil" is a classic horror story based on very mysterious events that I once heard a prominent Catholic priest tell. “Burn After Reading” is, for me, the saddest of all my stories, even though it doesn't feel that way when you read it. This story is based on real events that happened in my own family. “Fredi Heart of Glass” is also a sad story, it is the echo of a boy I met a long time ago, with the same problem as Fredi. “The Labyrinth of Anatfod” is perhaps the most Borgesian of all my stories. “Damiana and Toribio” is a love story that revolves around the queen of my life: literature. “Moussaka and Salmon” is based on the romantic history of a dear friend. “My name is not Javier” is dedicated to my father and my husband. “The map was upside down” is a kind of phantasmagoric comedy with an unexpected ending. “Quid pro quo” is a story based on a crocodile that was in my family, although the animal is not the main character of this story. When I was a child, I heard my mother mention the crocodile and I imagined the rest of the story. In all my stories, there is some autobiographical element and some more fiction. However, the line that separates both elements is sometimes blurry or even non-existent.."

- Stephanie Rendón

Works
2022. Teekond Méxicost Setomaale

2023. Que venga la noche