WSofía Casanova was a poet, novelist, and journalist, the first Spanish woman to become a permanent correspondent in a foreign country and a war correspondent. She was a cultured woman, well known in the literary circles of the time. In her work she highlighted the human aspect of her chronicles as a correspondent for the newspaper ABC in Poland and Russia, where she reported on the suffering of the civilian population during the wars she covered, adding literary value. Her activity throughout Europe allowed her to experience events such as the First World War, the fall of Czarist Russia, the emergence of the Bolshevik regime, and the Second World War. She wrote for newspapers such as ABC, La Época, El Liberal, and El Imparcial, for the magazine Galicia, for other Galician publications, and for the international press, such as the Gazeta Polska and the New York Times. Of Catholic and monarchical convictions in the Spanish Civil War, she joined the Francoist ranks. Her long life allowed her to leave behind a broad collection of writings covering all literary genres.
WXosé Castro Roig is a Galician translator and television presenter.
Xosé María Díaz Castro was a Galician poet and translator.
WXesús Ferro Ruibal is a theologian, Latinist and writer from Galicia.
WFrancisca González Garrido, better known as Fanny Garrido, was a Galician writer and translator.
WSantiago Lopo, born in Vigo in 1974, is a Galician writer, teacher and translator.
WJosé Robles Pazos was a Spanish writer, academic and independent left-wing activist. Born to an aristocratic family, Robles embraced left-wing views which forced him to leave Spain and go into exile in the United States.
WManuel Oreste Rodríguez López was a Galician poet and writer.
WLois Tobío Fernández was a Galician diplomat, writer, translator and philologist.
WAndrés Torres Queiruga is a Galician theologian, writer and translator.
WJosé Ángel Valente Docasar was a Spanish poet of the Generation of '50, essayist, translator, who wrote in Spanish and Galician.