Aleyda Quevedo Rojas (born 1972, Quito)[1] is an Ecuadorian poet and journalist.
[3] Among her best-known works are the poems Algunas rosas verdes (1996), for which she won the Jorge Carrera Andrade Award of that year,[4] and Soy mi cuerpo (2006), in which she uses the human figure as an escape from the fears and anguish provoked by death.
[5][6] In 2017, the House of Ecuadorian Culture published the book Cierta manera de la luz sobre el cuerpo, a compilation of Quevedo's poems to that point.
[7][8] Writer Jesús David Curbelo described Quevedo's work as the "witness of a life and a supplier of feelings in which she scrutinizes first the body, then emotions, then finally the mind.
"[9] In July 2018, Quevedo attended a colloquium commemorating Jorge Carrera Andrade with writers César Eduardo Carrión, Javier Cevallos Perugachi, José Gregorio Vásquez, Jesús David Curbelo, and Mario Pera.