A little bit about me
I grew up like any child full of dreams. He wanted to be a cartoonist for the cartoons he watched. I dreamed of meeting the authors, I did not know that this was in Japan. The ingenuity of a seven-year-old is like that, right? My older brother opened my eyes and crushed my dreams a bit. I drew incessantly until adolescence where the world of role-playing caught me. Sometimes I thought I was an evil dark elf, sometimes an evil orc, I was once an evil wizard, in fact, I was always evil. That's why I ended up being the game director. He was terrifyingly evil, plus he knew my own game. He had connected with the players in a wonderful way since he was the same one who created the rules, paths, stories, map, monsters. No one could direct it better than me without studying it first (what a fiasco, I always wanted to play), the truth was that I was very shy to speak and had problems with pronunciation (they are still there, that's why I write), but with friends it was different.
We all became adults at some point in our lives and that was over, too quickly, as is the case with all good things. In times to come the future held in my super imaginary mind boring jobs in factories and offices. Once I tried to escape from the routine madness by going to college, cartoon design was the career I had chosen for the great adventure. The emotion lasted as long as the body can bear at twenty-four years of age, the rhythm of sleeping only three hours a day reached up to two years of forced trips to the capital. Not everything was wasted time, but rather, an investment that to this day I am thankful for having encouraged me. Two points lead to this: I met a great screenwriter from my country (Argentina), who opened the doors of literature with a project that occurred to me to present on his subject. The second to take the leap of leaving the boring job and dedicate myself to novels. Now I have spent several years torturing the characters I create. Those super stubborn heroes in saving them all go through the cruelty of those who speak to them, but not everything is horror, sometimes I let them feel the proximity of a happy ending, since the twists and turns are what I like to leave in the novels for you.