Virginia Betancourt

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Virginia Betancourt Valverde (born 11 April 1935) is an author and former national library director. She served as Director of the National Library of Venezuela (Instituto Autónomo Biblioteca Nacional).[1][2] She is the daughter of Rómulo Betancourt who served as president of Venezuela, was exiled, and then served again.

Her parents Rómulo Betancourt and Carmen Valverde

She wrote books about her family, efforts to free Cuban exiles imprisoned after the "Bay of Pigs" invasion attempting to overthrow Fidel Castro,[3] and a book about libraries in Latin America.

She was born in San Jose, Costa Rica.

Justo Molina photographed her in 1982.[4] She gave an interview published April 2021.[5]

Writings[edit]

  • Vida Familia (1890 - 1958) (2007)[6]
  • Bay of Pigs the Long and Hard Road to Freedom (2011)[3]
  • El Sistema Nacional de Bibliotecas e Información de Venezuela (SINASBI), 1974-1998; una experiencia latinoamericana exitosa en la formación de ciudadanía (2020)[7]


References[edit]

  1. ^ Valverde, Virginia Betancourt (October 30, 1992). "A New Alliance: The Association of Latin American National Libraries (ABINIA)". World Libraries. 3 (1) – via worldlibraries.dom.edu.
  2. ^ "Venezuela's National Library as the Nucleus of a National Library System (IABNSB) in the 20th century – IFLA". Retrieved 2023-11-02.
  3. ^ a b Betancourt, Virginia (April 4, 2011). Bahía de Cochinos. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781460972625 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ "Virginia Betancourt Valverde". 1982.
  5. ^ "Habla Virginia Betancourt Valverde".
  6. ^ Valverde, Virginia Betancourt (October 30, 2007). Vida en familia (1890-1958). Fundación para la Cultura Urbana, Grupo de Empresas Econoinvest. ISBN 9789806553712 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ Valverde, Virginia Betancourt (October 30, 2020). El Sistema Nacional de Bibliotecas e Información de Venezuela (SINASBI), 1974-1998: una experiencia latinoamericana exitosa en la formación de ciudadanía. ABediciones. ISBN 9789802449774 – via Google Books.