The writing of Felipe Benítez Reyes, a significant contributor to the
Spanish Postmodern esthetic, speaks to issues of voice, persona, and the
possibilities of fiction. Probable Lives won the 1996 National Book
Award in Spain, the 1996 National Critics' Award in Spain, and the City
of Melilla International Prize. A book of heteronyms, the
character-poets in Probable Lives read as forgotten or unknown
twentieth-century authors, all "rediscovered" and compiled by an
anthologist who is also the creation of Reyes. Probable Lives tweaks
the notion of identity in ways that are both engaging and downright
funny.