Elizabeth Castro

Elizabeth Castro, sometimes known as Liz Castro, is an American author and translator best known for her books aimed to educate the reader on particular aspects of website development, such as HTML and Perl. From 1987 to 1993 Castro lived in Barcelona and managed the translation of computer programs. In 1993 she moved back to the United States to write books about using the internet and World Wide Web.

Elizabeth Castro
Liz Castro
Castro in 2013
NationalityAmerica
Other namesLiz Castro
Occupations
Known forCatalan independence activism

Currently based in Barcelona, she has also been active in the Catalan independence movement, promoting the cause in the English language sphere with her latest and most notable project being What's up with Catalonia?,[1] with authors like Josep Maria Ganyet, among many others.

On May 9, 2015, she was the most voted candidate in the elections to the National Secretary of the Catalan National Assembly,[2] the grassroots movement for Catalan independence, and currently is its International Committee Chair.

Publications

Books

As of 2010, all of her English language books have been published through Peachpit Press, in their 'Visual Quickstart Guide' or 'Visual Quickproject Guide' formats. These books give example code and illustrations followed by explanations designed to teach related concepts.

HTML

  • HTML for the World Wide Web. January 1996. ISBN 0-201-88448-8.
  • HTML for the World Wide Web (2nd ed.). February 1997. ISBN 0-201-68862-X.
  • HTML 4 for the World Wide Web (3rd ed.). May 1998. ISBN 0-201-69696-7.
  • HTML 4 for the World Wide Web (Fourth ed.). October 1999. ISBN 0-201-35493-4.
  • HTML for the World Wide Web, 5th Edition, with XHTML and CSS. September 2002. ISBN 0-321-13007-3.
  • HTML for the World Wide Web, 5th Edition, with XHTML and CSS, Student Edition. February 2003. ISBN 0-321-15068-6.
  • Creating a Web Page with HTML. August 2004. ISBN 0-321-27847-X.
  • HTML, XHTML & CSS (Sixth ed.). August 2006. ISBN 0-321-43084-0.
  • HTML5 and CSS3 (Seventh ed.). December 2011. ISBN 978-0-321-71961-4.
  • HTML5 and CSS3, Seventh Edition, with DVD QuickStart Video. January 2012. ISBN 978-0-321-81539-2.

Netscape

  • Netscape 2 for Windows. May 1996. ISBN 0-201-88615-4.
  • Netscape 2 for Macintosh. June 1996. ISBN 0-201-88631-6.
  • Netscape 3 for Macintosh. October 1996. ISBN 0-201-69408-5.
  • Netscape 3 for Windows. November 1996. ISBN 0-201-69409-3.
  • Netscape Communicator 4 for Windows. October 1997. ISBN 0-201-68864-6.
  • Netscape Communicator 4 for Macintosh. November 1997. ISBN 0-201-68886-7.

Perl and CGI

XML

Blogger

iPhoto

EPUB

Castro continues to release miniguide updates to her well-received EPUB guide.

Matthew Diener, editor of EPUBsecrets reviewed her fourth miniguide, praising how Castro takes the reader through the steps to make the "conversion to ePUB easier and better." He lists ways that this miniguide aids users in placement and insertion of images and media, as well as preparing ePUBS to be used for Kindle editions. Diener also is pleased that the miniguides are "DRM free. This means you can actually "crack these ePUBs" and take a look at the files that make up her books. This will allow you to see everything she does to make her ePUBs appear the way they do."[3] Joel Friedlander in The Book Designer said, "Liz Castro has cracked the code on creating beautiful, functional ebooks...Liz Castro's EPUB Straight to the Point is a fantastic resource with clear instruction and should be in the ereader of anyone whose work involves dealing with EPUB and iBooks."[4] Adam C. Engst, Contributing Editor at MacUser, MacWEEK, and Macworld, in his e-newsletter TidBITS called Castro's site for iPhoto book themes "a wonderfully useful Web site".[5]

Politics

Other

  • Elizabeth Castro (1992). Faxivisa: la realidad sobre la compra por correo de material informático a Estados Unidos [The Reality of Ordering Computer Equipment by Mail from the United States]. ISBN 84-88004-08-7.

Awards

Castro during one of her books' premiere

From Òmnium Cultural, Dec 16, 2011: The jury of the 25th Joan B. Cendrós Prize has awarded the prize for her work about Catalonia published outside of Catalonia to the American publisher Liz Castro. Castro, a writer living in Massachusetts, has become known in the last few years for her work promoting Catalonia and talking about its linguistic, cultural, and political situation through her publishing house, Catalonia Press, as well as the internet, where she reports on Catalan news in English.[6] In 2014 she received one of the Batista i Roca Award - Enric Garriga Trullols Memorial, granted by the Institut de Projecció Exterior de la Cultura Catalana.

References

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