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Gabriel García Márquez

 
Gabriel García Márquez

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Gabriel García Márquez



 
 
Gabriel José de la Concordia García Márquez (born March 6, 1927) is a Colombia
Colombia

Colombia , officially the Republic of Colombia , is a country in north-western South America. Colombia is bordered to the east by Venezuela and Brazil; to the south by Ecuador and Peru; to the north by the Caribbean Sea; to the north west by Panama; and to the west by the Pacific Ocean....
n novelist, short-story writer, screenwriter
Screenwriter

Screenwriters or scenarists are scriptwriters who write the screenplays from which films and television programs are made.Most screenwriters start their careers writing on speculation....
 and journalist
Journalist

A journalist is a person who practices journalism, the gathering and dissemination of information about current events, trends, issues, and people while striving for viewpoints that aren't biased....
. García Márquez, familiarly known as "Gabo" in his native country, is considered one of the most significant authors of the 20th century. In 1982, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature
Nobel Prize in Literature

The Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded annually, since 1901, to an author from any country who has, in the words from the will of Alfred Nobel, produced "in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction" ....
. He pursued a self-directed education that resulted in his leaving law school for a career in journalism. From early on, he showed no inhibitions in his criticism of Colombian and foreign politics.






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Gabriel José de la Concordia García Márquez (born March 6, 1927) is a Colombia
Colombia

Colombia , officially the Republic of Colombia , is a country in north-western South America. Colombia is bordered to the east by Venezuela and Brazil; to the south by Ecuador and Peru; to the north by the Caribbean Sea; to the north west by Panama; and to the west by the Pacific Ocean....
n novelist, short-story writer, screenwriter
Screenwriter

Screenwriters or scenarists are scriptwriters who write the screenplays from which films and television programs are made.Most screenwriters start their careers writing on speculation....
 and journalist
Journalist

A journalist is a person who practices journalism, the gathering and dissemination of information about current events, trends, issues, and people while striving for viewpoints that aren't biased....
. García Márquez, familiarly known as "Gabo" in his native country, is considered one of the most significant authors of the 20th century. In 1982, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature
Nobel Prize in Literature

The Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded annually, since 1901, to an author from any country who has, in the words from the will of Alfred Nobel, produced "in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction" ....
. He pursued a self-directed education that resulted in his leaving law school for a career in journalism. From early on, he showed no inhibitions in his criticism of Colombian and foreign politics. In 1958, he married Mercedes Barcha; they have two sons, Rodrigo and Gonzalo.

He started as a journalist, and has written many acclaimed non-fiction works and short stories, but is best-known for his novel
Novel

File:2009 stapelweise Neuerscheinungen im Buchladen.JPGA novel is today a long narrative in literary prose. The genre has historical roots both in the fields of the medieval and early modern Romance and in the tradition of the novella....
s, such as One Hundred Years of Solitude
One Hundred Years of Solitude

One Hundred Years of Solitude is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning Colombian author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It was first published in Spanish language in 1967....
 (1967) and Love in the Time of Cholera
Love in the Time of Cholera

Love in the Time of Cholera is a novel by Nobel Prize winning Colombian author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez that was first published in Spanish language in 1985, with an English language translation released in 1988 by Alfred A....
 (1985). His works have achieved significant critical acclaim and widespread commercial success, most notably for popularizing a literary style labeled as magical realism, which uses magical elements and events in otherwise ordinary and realistic situations. Some of his works are set in a fictional village called Macondo, and most of them express the theme of solitude.

Biography


Early life


Gabriel García Márquez was born on March 6, 1927 in the town of Aracataca
Aracataca

Aracataca is a municipality located in the Departments of Colombia of Magdalena Department, Colombia's Caribbean Region. Aracata is a river town founded in 1885....
, Colombia
Colombia

Colombia , officially the Republic of Colombia , is a country in north-western South America. Colombia is bordered to the east by Venezuela and Brazil; to the south by Ecuador and Peru; to the north by the Caribbean Sea; to the north west by Panama; and to the west by the Pacific Ocean....
, to Gabriel Eligio García and Luisa Santiaga Márquez. Soon after García Márquez was born, his father became a pharmacist. In January 1929, his parents moved to Baranquilla while García Marquez stayed in Aracataca. He was raised by his maternal grandparents, Doña Tranquilina Iguarán and Colonel Nicolás Ricardo Márquez Mejía. When he was eight, his grandfather died, and he moved to his parents' home in Barranquilla where his father owned a pharmacy.

When his parents fell in love their relationship met with resistance from Luisa Santiaga Marquez's father, the Colonel. Gabriel Eligio García was not the man the Colonel had envisioned winning the heart of his daughter: he (Gabriel Eligio) was a Conservative
Colombian Conservative Party

The Colombian Conservative Party , is a Conservatism political party in Colombia. The party was unofficially founded by a group of Revolutionary Commoners during the Revolutionary War for Independence from the Spanish Monarchy and later formally established during the Greater Colombia formation....
, and had the reputation of being a womanizer. Gabriel Eligio wooed Luisa with violin serenades, love poems, countless letters, and even telegraph messages after her father sent her away with the intention of separating the young couple. Her parents tried everything to get rid of the man, but he kept coming back, and it was obvious their daughter was committed to him. Her family finally capitulated and gave her permission to marry him. (The tragicomic story of their courtship would later be adapted and recast as Love in the Time of Cholera
Love in the Time of Cholera

Love in the Time of Cholera is a novel by Nobel Prize winning Colombian author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez that was first published in Spanish language in 1985, with an English language translation released in 1988 by Alfred A....
.)

Since García Márquez's parents were more or less strangers to him for the first few years of his life, his grandparents influenced his early development very strongly. His grandfather, whom he called "Papalelo", was a Liberal
Colombian Liberal Party

The Colombian Liberal Party is a social liberalism-social democracy party in Colombia.The Party was founded in 1848 and, together with the Colombian Conservative Party, subsequently became one of the two main political forces in the country for over a century....
 veteran of the Thousand Days War
Thousand Days War

The Thousand Days War , was a civil armed conflict in the newly created Republic of Colombia, between the Colombian Conservative Party, the Colombian Liberal Party and its radical factions....
. The Colonel was considered a hero by Colombian Liberals and was highly respected. He was well-known for his refusal to remain silent about the banana massacres that took place the year García Márquez was born. The Colonel, whom García Márquez has described as his "umbilical cord with history and reality", was also an excellent storyteller. He taught García Márquez lessons from the dictionary, took him to the circus each year, and was the first to introduce his grandson to ice—a "miracle" found at the United Fruit Company
United Fruit Company

The United Fruit Company was a major United States corporation that traded tropical fruit grown in Third World plantations and sold in the United States and Europe....
 store. He would also occasionally tell his young grandson "You can't imagine how much a dead man weighs", reminding him that there was no greater burden than to have killed a man, a lesson that García Márquez would later integrate into his novels.

García Márquez's political and ideological views were shaped by his grandfather's stories. In an interview, García Márquez told his friend Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza, "my grandfather the Colonel was a Liberal. My political ideas probably came from him to begin with because, instead of telling me fairy tales when I was young, he would regale me with horrifying accounts of the last civil war that free-thinkers and anti-clerics waged against the Conservative government." This influenced his political views and his literary technique so that "in the same way that his writing career initially took shape in conscious opposition to the Colombian literary status quo, García Márquez's socialist and anti-imperialist views are in principled opposition to the global status quo dominated by the United States".

García Márquez's grandmother, Doña Tranquilina Iguarán Cotes, played an equally influential role in his upbringing. He was inspired by the way she "treated the extraordinary as something perfectly natural." The house was filled with stories of ghosts and premonitions, omens and portents, all of which were studiously ignored by her husband. According to García Márquez she was "the source of the magical, superstitious and supernatural view of reality". He enjoyed his grandmother's unique way of telling stories. No matter how fantastic or improbable her statements, she always delivered them as if they were the irrefutable truth. It was a deadpan style that, some thirty years later, heavily influenced her grandson's most popular novel, One Hundred Years of Solitude
One Hundred Years of Solitude

One Hundred Years of Solitude is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning Colombian author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It was first published in Spanish language in 1967....
.

Education

In 1940, García Márquez left his family, which had moved a year earlier to Sucre, in order to begin his secondary school education at the Jesuit boarding school of San José in Barranquilla
Barranquilla

Barranquilla, an industrial, portuary, and special district, is a city and municipality located in northern Colombia by the Caribbean sea. The capital of the Atl?ntico Department, it is the largest industrial city and port in the Caribbean Region , and the fourth largest city in Colombia....
. At San José, he first published his words in the school magazine Juventud. On a visit to his parents in Sucre, he met Mercedes Barcha at a student dance, and knew right away that he intended to marry her when they were finished with their studies.

In 1943, he was awarded a scholarship to attend the Liceo Nacional de Varones in Zipaquirá
Zipaquirá

Zipaquir? is a municipality and city of Colombia in the department of Cundinamarca. Its neighboring municipalities are Tausa and Cogua to the north; Nemoc?n, Gachancip? and Sop? to the east; Cajic? and Tabio to the south; and Subachoque and Pacho to the west....
, a city thirty miles north of Bogotá
Bogotá

Bogot? ? officially named Bogot?, D.C. , formerly called Santa Fe de Bogot? ? is the capital city of Colombia, as well as the most populous city in the country, with 6,776,009 inhabitants ....
. In an interview, García Márquez noted,"My literary background was basically in poetry, but bad poetry ... I started out with the poetry that appeared in grammar books. I realized that what I most liked was poetry and what I most hated was Spanish class, grammar." During this period García Márquez also read a wide variety of European classics in addition to Spanish and Colombian literature.

After graduation in 1947, he started law school at the National University of Colombia
National University of Colombia

The Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogot?, D.C. , is a public university, coeducational, research university, and the Flagship university campus of the National University of Colombia System, which also includes six satellite campuses located in the cities of Medell?n, Manizales, Palmira, Arauca, Arauca, Leticia, and San Andr?s, Colombia....
 in Bogotá. While in Bogotá, García Márquez took up a program of self-directed reading. The Metamorphosis
The Metamorphosis

The Metamorphosis is a novella by Franz Kafka, first published in 1915. The story begins with a traveling salesman, Gregor Samsa, waking to find himself transformed into an insect ....
 by Franz Kafka
Franz Kafka

Franz Kafka was one of the major fiction writers of the 20th century. He was born to a middle-class German language-speaking Jewish family in Prague, Austria-Hungary, presently the Czech Republic....
 "in the false translation by Jorge Luis Borges
Jorge Luis Borges

Jorge Francisco Isidoro Luis Borges was an Argentina writer born in Buenos Aires. He was brought up bilingual in Spanish and English. In 1914, his family moved to Switzerland where he attended school, then traveled around Spain....
" was one work which particularly inspired him. He was excited by the idea that one could write acceptable literature in an untraditional style that was so similar to his grandmother's stories which "inserted bizarre events into an ordinary setting and related those anomalies as if they were just another aspect of everyday life". He was now more eager to be a writer than before. Soon after, his first published story La tercera resignación appeared in the September 13, 1947 edition of the newspaper El Espectador
El Espectador

El Espectador is a newspaper with national circulation within Colombia, founded by Fidel Cano Guti?rrez on 22 March 1887 in Medell?n and published since 1915 in Bogot?....
.

Although his passion was now writing, he continued in the law school in 1948 to please his father. During the Bogotá riots on April 9, 1948, the university closed indefinitely and his boarding house was burnt down and thus García Márquez transferred to the University of Cartagena. By 1950, he gave up on the idea of becoming a lawyer to focus on journalism. He moved back to Barranquilla to write for the newspaper, El Heraldo
El Heraldo de Barranquilla

El Heraldo is a newspaper based in the city of Barranquilla in northern Colombia. It was founded in 1933 by Alberto Pumarejo, Luis Eduardo Manotas and Juan Fern?ndez Ortega....
. In his autobiography, he says: "I had left the university a year before with the rash hope that I could earn a living in journalism and literature without any need to learn them, inspired by a sentence I believe I had read in George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw, was an Irish people playwright.Although Shaw's first profitable writing was music and literary criticism, his talent was for drama, and he wrote more than 60 plays....
, 'From a very early age I've had to interrupt my education to go to school.'" Although García Márquez never finished university, Columbia University
Columbia University

Columbia University in the City of New York , is a private university in the United States and a member of the Ivy League. Columbia's main campus lies in the Morningside Heights, Manhattan neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan, in New York City....
 in New York awarded him an honorary doctorate of letters in 1971.

Journalism

García Márquez began his career as a journalist while studying law in university. In 1948 and 1949 he wrote for El Universal
El Universal (Cartagena)

El Universal is a regional newspaper based in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia.Founded by Domingo L?pez Escauriaza and Eduardo Ferrer Ferrer, its first edition went on sale on 8 March 1948....
 in Cartagena
Cartagena, Colombia

Cartagena de Indias , is a port city on the northern coast of Colombia and capital of Bol?var Department. The metropolitan area has a population of 1,240,000, and the city proper 1,090,000 ....
. Later, from 1950 until 1952, he wrote a "whimsical" column under the name of "Septimus" for the local paper El Heraldo in Barranquilla
Barranquilla

Barranquilla, an industrial, portuary, and special district, is a city and municipality located in northern Colombia by the Caribbean sea. The capital of the Atl?ntico Department, it is the largest industrial city and port in the Caribbean Region , and the fourth largest city in Colombia....
. García Márquez noted of his time at El Heraldo, "I'd write a piece and they'd pay me three pesos for it, and maybe an editorial for another three." During this time he became an active member of the informal group of writers and journalists known as the Barranquilla Group
Barranquilla Group

The Barranquilla Group was the name given to the group of writers, journalists, and philosophers who congregated in the Colombian city of Barranquilla in the middle of the twentieth century; it became one of the most productive intellectual and literary communities of the period....
, an association that provided great motivation and inspiration for his literary career. He worked with inspirational figures such as Ramon Vinyes, who García Márquez depicted as an Old Catalan who owns a bookstore in One Hundred Years of Solitude. At this time, García Márquez was also introduced to the works of writers such as Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf

Adeline Virginia Woolf was an England novelist and essayist, regarded as one of the foremost modernist literature literature figures of the twentieth century....
 and William Faulkner
William Faulkner

William Faulkner was a Nobel Prize in Literature-winning United States author. One of the most influential writers of the 20th century, his reputation is based on his novels, novellas and short story....
. Faulkner's narrative techniques, historical themes and use of provincial locations influenced Latin American authors. The environment of Barranquilla gave García Márquez a world-class literary education and provided him with a unique perspective on Caribbean culture. From 1954 to 1955, García Márquez spent time in Bogotá and regularly wrote for Bogotá
Bogotá

Bogot? ? officially named Bogot?, D.C. , formerly called Santa Fe de Bogot? ? is the capital city of Colombia, as well as the most populous city in the country, with 6,776,009 inhabitants ....
's El Espectador
El Espectador

El Espectador is a newspaper with national circulation within Colombia, founded by Fidel Cano Guti?rrez on 22 March 1887 in Medell?n and published since 1915 in Bogot?....
. He was a regular film critic which drove his interest in film.

In 1994, along with his brother Jaime and with lawyer Jaime Abello, he founded the Fundación Nuevo Periodismo Iberoamericano (New Iberoamerican Journalism Foundation), which aims to help young journalists learn with teachers such as Alma Guillermoprieto
Alma Guillermoprieto

Alma Guillermoprieto is a Mexico journalist who has written extensively about Latin America for the United Kingdom and United States press. Her writings have also been widely disseminated within the Spanish language world....
 or Jon Lee Anderson
Jon Lee Anderson

Jon Lee Anderson is a biographer, author, international investigative reporter, and staff writer for The New Yorker, reporting from warzone locales such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Uganda, Israel, El Salvador, Ireland, Lebanon, Iran, and throughout the Middle East....
, and to stimulate new ways to do journalism. García Márquez is still the foundation's president.

The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor
Ending in controversy, his last domestically-written editorial for El Espectador was a series of fourteen news articles in which he revealed the hidden story of how a Colombian Navy vessel's shipwreck "occurred because the boat contained a badly stowed cargo of contraband goods that broke loose on the deck." García Márquez compiled this story through interviews with a young sailor who survived the shipwreck. The publication of the articles resulted in public controversy, as they discredited the official account of the events, which had blamed a storm for the shipwreck and glorified the surviving sailor.

In response to this controversy El Espectador sent García Márquez away to Europe to be a foreign correspondent. He wrote about his experiences for El Independiente
El Independiente

Track listing# Intro # No Hay# Wondering Why# Cemento # Quiero Volver Esta Noche# Abrazo del Oso [RMX] # En La Distancia ...
, a newspaper which had briefly replaced El Espectador during the military government of General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla
Gustavo Rojas Pinilla

Gustavo Rojas Pinilla was a Colombian people General, military dictator of Colombia from 1953 to 1957 and Colombian political figure, as well as a 1970 presidential candidate on behalf of the National Popular Alliance , political movement that he founded....
 and was later shut down by Colombian authorities. García Márquez's background in journalism provided a foundational base for his writing career. Literary critic Bell-Villada noted, "Owing to his hands on experiences in journalism, García Márquez is of all the great living authors the one who is closest to everyday reality."

Marriage and family

Since García Márquez had met Mercedes Barcha, they had been waiting to finish school in order to get married. When he was sent to Europe as a foreign correspondent, Mercedes waited for him to return to Barranquilla. They were finally wed in 1958. The following year, their first son, Rodrigo García
Rodrigo Garcia

Rodrigo Garc?a Barcha is a television director and film director. He is the son of Colombian writer Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez and Mercedes Barcha Pardo....
, now a television and film director, was born. In 1961, the family traveled by Greyhound
Greyhound Lines

Greyhound Lines is an intercity common carrier of passengers by bus serving over 3,700 destinations in the United States. It was founded in Hibbing, Minnesota, USA, in 1914 and incorporated as "Greyhound Corporation" in 1929....
 bus throughout the southern United States and eventually settled in Mexico City
Mexico City

Mexico City is the capital city of Mexico. It is the most important economic, industrial, and cultural center in the country; the most populous city with over 8,836,045 inhabitants in 2008....
. García Márquez had wanted to see the Southern United States because it had inspired the writings of William Faulkner
William Faulkner

William Faulkner was a Nobel Prize in Literature-winning United States author. One of the most influential writers of the 20th century, his reputation is based on his novels, novellas and short story....
. Three years later the couple's second son, Gonzalo, was born in Mexico. Gonzalo is currently a graphic designer in Mexico City.

Leaf Storm


Leaf Storm (La Hojarasca) is García Márquez's first novella and took seven years to find a publisher, finally being published in 1955. García Márquez notes that "of all that he had written (as of 1973), Leaf Storm was his favorite because he felt that it was the most sincere and spontaneous." All the events of the novel take place in one room, during a half-hour period on Wednesday September 12, 1928. It is the story of an old colonel (similar to García Márquez's own grandfather) who tries to give a proper Christian burial to an unpopular French doctor. The colonel is supported only by his daughter and grandson. The novel explores the child's first experience with death by following his stream of consciousness. As well, the book reveals the perspective of Isabel, the Colonel's daughter, which provides a feminine point of view.

One Hundred Years of Solitude


Since García Márquez was eighteen, he had wanted to write a novel based on his grandparents' house where he grew up. However, he struggled with finding an appropriate tone and put off the idea until one day the answer hit him while driving his family to Acapulco
Acapulco

Acapulco is a city and major port in the Political divisions of Mexico of Guerrero on the Pacific Ocean coast of Mexico, southwest from Mexico City....
. He turned the car around and the family returned home so he could begin writing. He sold his car so his family would have money to live off of while he wrote, but writing the novel took far longer than he expected, and he wrote every day for eighteen months. His wife had to ask for food on credit from their butcher and their baker as well as nine months of rent on credit from their landlord. Fortunately, when the book was finally published in 1967 it became his most commercially successful novel, One Hundred Years of Solitude (Cien años de soledad) (1967; English translation
Translation

Translation is the hermeneutics of the Meaning of a text and the subsequent production of an Dynamic and formal equivalence text, likewise called a "translation," that communicates the same message in another language....
 by Gregory Rabassa
Gregory Rabassa

Gregory Rabassa is a renowned literature Translation from Spanish language and Portuguese language to English language who currently teaches at Queens College....
 1970). The story chronicles several generations of the Buendía family from the time they found the fictional South American village Macondo
Macondo

Macondo is a fictional town described in Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez's novel One Hundred Years of Solitude. It is the home town of the Buend?a family....
 through their trials and tribulations, instances of incest, births and deaths. The history of Macondo is often generalized by critics to represent rural towns throughout Latin America
Latin America

Latin America is a region of the Americas where Romance languages ? particularly Spanish language and Portuguese language, and variably French language ? are primarily spoken....
 or at least near García Márquez's native Aracataca
Aracataca

Aracataca is a municipality located in the Departments of Colombia of Magdalena Department, Colombia's Caribbean Region. Aracata is a river town founded in 1885....
.

This novel was widely popular and led to García Márquez's Nobel Prize as well as the Rómulo Gallegos Prize
Rómulo Gallegos Prize

The R?mulo Gallegos International Novel Prize was created on 6 August 1964 by a presidential decree enacted by Venezuelan List of presidents of Venezuela Ra?l Leoni, in honor of the Venezuelan politician and President R?mulo Gallegos, the author of Do?a B?rbara....
 in 1972. William Kennedy has called it "the first piece of literature since the Book of Genesis that should be required reading for the entire human race," and hundreds of articles and books of literary critique have been published in response to it. However, García Márquez himself does not completely understand the success of this particular book: "Most critics don't realize that a novel like One Hundred Years of Solitude is a bit of a joke, full of signals to close friends; and so, with some pre-ordained right to pontificate they take on the responsibility of decoding the book and risk making terrible fools of themselves."

Fame


After writing One Hundred Years of Solitude García Márquez returned to Europe, this time bringing along his family, to live in Barcelona
Barcelona

Barcelona is the capital and most populous city of the Autonomous communities of Spain of Catalonia and the second largest city in Spain, with a population of 1,615,908 in 2008, while the population of the Metropolitan Area was 3,161,081....
, Spain for seven years. The international recognition García Márquez earned with the publication of the novel led to his ability to act as a facilitator
Facilitator

A facilitator is someone who helps a group of people understand their common objectives and assists them to plan to achieve them without taking a particular position in the discussion....
 in several negotiations between the Colombian government and the guerrillas, including the former 19th of May Movement M-19, and the current FARC and ELN
National Liberation Army (Colombia)

National Liberation Army is a revolutionary, Marxist, insurgent guerrilla warfare group that has been operating in several regions of Colombia since 1964....
 organizations. The popularity of his writing also led to friendships with powerful leaders, including one with former Cuban president Fidel Castro
Fidel Castro

Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz is a Cuban revolutionary leader who was prime minister of Cuba from February 1959 to December 1976 and then president, premier until his resignation from the office in February 2008....
, which has been analyzed in Gabo and Fidel: Portrait of a Friendship. In an interview with Claudia Dreifus in 1982 García Márquez notes his relationship with Castro is mostly based on literature: “Ours is an intellectual friendship. It may not be widely known that Fidel is a very cultured man. When we’re together, we talk a great deal about literature.” Others have criticized García Márquez for the relationship. Cuban writer Reinaldo Arenas
Reinaldo Arenas

Reinaldo Arenas was a Cubans poet, novelist, and playwright who despite his early sympathy for the Cuban Revolution, grew critical of and then rebelled against the Politics of Cuba....
, in his 1992 memoir Antes que anocheza (Before Night Falls
Before Night Falls

Before Night Falls is the 1992 autobiography of gay Cubans writer Reinaldo Arenas, describing his life in Cuba, his time in prison, and his ultimate escape to the United States....
), notes that García Márquez accompanied Castro at a 1980 speech in which the latter accused refugees recently gunned-down in the Peruvian embassy of being "riffraff"; Arenas bitterly remembers his fellow writer's "hypocritical applause" for Castro.

Also due to his newfound fame and his outspoken views on U.S. imperialism he was labeled as a subversive and for many years was denied visas by U.S. immigration authorities. However, after Bill Clinton
Bill Clinton

William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States from 1993 to 2001. He was the fifteenth Democrat elected to that office....
 was elected U.S. president, he finally lifted the travel ban and claimed that García Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude
One Hundred Years of Solitude

One Hundred Years of Solitude is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning Colombian author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It was first published in Spanish language in 1967....
 was his favorite novel. There is a street in East Los Angeles, CA bearing his name.

Autumn of the Patriarch


García Márquez was inspired to write a dictator novel
Dictator novel

The dictator novel is a literary genre of Latin American literature that challenges the role of the dictator in Latin American society. The theme of caudillo—the charismatic authoritarian "strongman"—is addressed by examining the relationship between power, dictatorship, and writing, and is used as an allegory for the role o...
 when he witnessed the flight of Venezuelan dictator Marcos Pérez Jiménez
Marcos Pérez Jiménez

Marcos Evangelista P?rez Jim?nez was a soldier and Presidents of Venezuela of Venezuela from 1952 to 1958....
. He shares, "it was the first time we had seen a dictator fall in Latin America." García Márquez began writing Autumn of the Patriarch (El otoño del patriarca) in 1968 and said it was finished in 1971; however, he continued to embellish the dictator novel
Dictator novel

The dictator novel is a literary genre of Latin American literature that challenges the role of the dictator in Latin American society. The theme of caudillo—the charismatic authoritarian "strongman"—is addressed by examining the relationship between power, dictatorship, and writing, and is used as an allegory for the role o...
 until 1975 when it was published in Spain. According to García Márquez, the novel is a "poem on the solitude of power" as it follows the life of an eternal dictator known as the General. The novel is developed through a series of anecdotes related to the life of the General, which do not appear in chronological order. Although the exact location of the story is not pin-pointed in the novel, the imaginary country is situated somewhere in the Caribbean.

García Márquez gave his own explanation of the plot:
My intention was always to make a synthesis of all the Latin American dictators, but especially those from the Caribbean. Nevertheless, the personality of Juan Vicente Gomez [of Venezuela] was so strong, in addition to the fact that he exercised a special fascination over me, that undoubtedly the Patriarch has much more of him than anyone else.


Pledge


After Autumn of the Patriarch was published the Garcia Marquez family moved from Barcelona to Mexico City
Mexico City

Mexico City is the capital city of Mexico. It is the most important economic, industrial, and cultural center in the country; the most populous city with over 8,836,045 inhabitants in 2008....
. and García Márquez pledged not to publish again until the Chilean Dictator Augusto Pinochet was deposed. However, he ultimately published Chronicle of a Death Foretold while Pinochet was still in power as he "could not remain silent in the face of injustice and repression."

Chronicle of a Death Foretold


Chronicle of a Death Foretold (Crónica de una muerte anunciada) recreates a murder that took place in Sucre, Colombia in 1951. The character named Santiago Nasar is based on a good friend from García Márquez's childhood, Cayetano Gentile Chimento. Pelayo classifies this novel as a combination of journalism, realism and detective story.

The plot of the novel revolves around Santiago Nasar's murder. The narrator acts as a detective, uncovering the events of the murder second by second. Literary critic Ruben Pelayo notes that the story "unfolds in an inverted fashion. Instead of moving forward... the plot moves backwards." In the first chapter, the narrator tells the reader exactly who killed Santiago Nasar and the rest of the book is left to unfold why.

Chronicle of a Death Foretold was published in 1981, just one year before García Márquez was winner of 1982's Nobel Prize in Literature. The novel was also adapted into a film by Italian director Francesco Rosi
Francesco Rosi

Francesco Rosi is an Italy film director. He is the father of the actress Carolina Rosi....
 in 1987.

Love in the Time of Cholera


Love in the Time of Cholera (El amor en los tiempos del cólera) was first published in 1985. It is considered a nontraditional love story as "lovers find love in their 'golden years'- in their seventies, when death is all around them".

Love in the Time of Cholera is based on the stories of two couples. The young love of Fermina Daza and Florentino Ariza is based on the love affair of García Márquez's parents. However, as García Márquez explains in an interview: “The only difference is [my parents] married. And as soon as they were married, they were no longer interesting as literary figures.” The love of old people is based on a newspaper story about the death of two Americans, who were almost 80 years old, who met every year in Acapulco. They were out in a boat one day and were murdered by the boatman with his oars. García Márquez notes, “Through their death, the story of their secret romance became known. I was fascinated by them. They were each married to other people.”

Illness

In 1999, García Márquez was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer. Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy

Chemotherapy, in its most general sense, refers to treatment of disease by chemicals that kill cells, specifically those of micro-organisms or cancer....
 provided by a hospital in Los Angeles proved to be successful, and the illness went into remission. This event prompted García Márquez to begin writing his memoirs: "I reduced relations with my friends to a minimum, disconnected the telephone, canceled the trips and all sorts of current and future plans", he told El Tiempo
El Tiempo

El Tiempo is the highest circulation daily newspaper in Colombia and a non-tabloid daily with national distribution. , it had an average weekday circulation of 314,000, rising to 453,000 for the Sunday edition....
, the Colombian newspaper, "...and locked myself in to write every day without interruption." In 2002, three years later, he published Living to Tell the Tale
Living to Tell the Tale

Living to Tell the Tale is the first volume of the autobiography of Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez.The book was originally published in Spanish in 2002, with an English translation by Edith Grossman published in 2003....
 (Vivir para Contarla), the first volume in a trilogy of memoirs.

In 2000, his impending death was incorrectly reported by Peruvian daily newspaper La República
La República

La Rep?blica is a center-left newspaper published in Lima, Peru. It is one of the two main national dailies sold all over the country since it was founded on May 3, 1981....
. The next day other newspapers republished his alleged farewell poem, "La Marioneta" but shortly afterwards García Márquez denied being the author of the poem, which was determined to be the work of a Mexican ventriloquist.

Recent works


In 2002, García Márquez published the memoir Vivir para contarla, the first of a projected three-volume autobiography. Edith Grossman
Edith Grossman

Edith Grossman is an award-winning United States translator specializing in English versions of Spanish language language books. She is one of the most important translators of Latin American fiction in the past century, translating the works of Mario Vargas Llosa, Nobel laureate Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez, Mayra Montero, Augusto Monterroso, J...
's English translation, Living to Tell the Tale
Living to Tell the Tale

Living to Tell the Tale is the first volume of the autobiography of Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez.The book was originally published in Spanish in 2002, with an English translation by Edith Grossman published in 2003....
, was published in November 2003. As of March 2008 his most recent novel is Memories of My Melancholy Whores
Memories of My Melancholy Whores

Memories of My Melancholy Whores is a novella by Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez.The book was originally published in Spanish in 2004, with an English translation by Edith Grossman published in October 2005....
 (Memoria de mis putas tristes), a love story that follows the romance of a 90-year old man and a pubescent concubine, that was published in October 2004. This book caused controversy in Iran, where it was banned after the initial 5,000 copies were printed and sold.

In May 2008, despite the fact that García Márquez had earlier declared that he "had finished with writing", it was announced that the author was now finishing a new novel, "a novel of love" that had yet to be given a title, to be published by the end of the year.

Film


Critics often describe the language that García Márquez's imagination produces as visual or graphic, and he himself explains each of his stories is inspired by "a visual image," so it comes as no surprise that he has a long and involved history with film. He is a film critic, he founded and served as executive director of the Film Institute in Havana, was the Head of the Latin American Film Foundation, and has written several screenplays. For his first script he worked with Carlos Fuentes
Carlos Fuentes

Carlos Fuentes Mac?as is a Mexican writer and one of the best-known living novelists and essayists in the Spanish-speaking world. Fuentes has influenced contemporary Latin American literature, and his works have been widely translated into English and other languages....
 on Juan Rulfo's El gallo de oro. His other screenplays include the films Tiempo de morir (1966) and Un señor muy viejo con unas alas enormes (1988), as well as the television series Amores difíciles (1991).

García Márquez also originally wrote his Eréndira as a screenplay. However, this version was lost and replaced by the novella. Nonetheless, he worked on rewriting the script in collaboration with Ruy Guerra
Ruy Guerra

Ruy Alexandre Guerra Coelho Pereira is a film director, screenwriter, film editor, and actor in Brazil. Guerra was born a Portugal citizen in Louren?o Marques in Mo?ambique, when it was still a colony of Portugal....
 and the film was released in Mexico in 1983.

Several of his stories have inspired other writers and directors. In 1987, the Italian director Francesco Rosi
Francesco Rosi

Francesco Rosi is an Italy film director. He is the father of the actress Carolina Rosi....
 directed the movie Cronaca di una morte annunciata
Chronicle of a Death Foretold (film)

'Chronicle of a Death Foretold' is a drama film directed by Francesco Rosi adapted by Tonino Guerra from the Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez ....
 based on Chronicle of a Death Foretold. Several film adaptations have been made in Mexico, including Miguel Littin
Miguel Littin

Miguel Litt?n was born on 9 August 1942 in Palmilla, Colchagua Province, Chile. He is a movie director and screenwriter. Littin was born to a Palestinian father and a Greeks mother....
's La Viuda de Montiel (1979), Jaime Humberto Hermosillo's Maria de mi corazón (1979), and Arturo Ripstein's El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (1998).

British director Mike Newell
Mike Newell (director)

Michael Cormac "Mike" Newell is an England film director and producer of motion pictures for the screen and for television....
 (Four Weddings and a Funeral
Four Weddings and a Funeral

Four Weddings and a Funeral is a 1994 in film United Kingdom romantic comedy film directed by Mike Newell . It was the first of several films by screenwriter Richard Curtis to feature Hugh Grant....
) filmed Love in the Time of Cholera
Love in the Time of Cholera (film)

Love in the Time of Cholera is a 2007 motion picture film director by Mike Newell . Based on the Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez, it tells the story of a love triangle between Fermina Daza and her two suitors, Florentino Ariza and Doctor Juvenal Urbino which spans 50 years, from 1880 to 1930....
 in Cartagena
Cartagena, Colombia

Cartagena de Indias , is a port city on the northern coast of Colombia and capital of Bol?var Department. The metropolitan area has a population of 1,240,000, and the city proper 1,090,000 ....
, Colombia, with the screenplay written by Ronald Harwood (The Pianist
The Pianist (2002 film)

The Pianist is a 2002 in film Poland-France-Germany-United Kingdom co-produced film directed by Roman Polanski, starring Adrien Brody. It is an adaptation of the The Pianist by History of the Jews in Poland musician Wladyslaw Szpilman....
). The film was released in the U.S. on November 16, 2007.

His novel Of Love and Other Demons has been adapted and directed by a Costa Rican filmmaker, Hilda Hidalgo, who is a graduate of the Film Institute at Havana where García Márquez frequently imparts screenplay workshops. Hidalgo's film is slated for a April 2009 release.

Style

While there are certain aspects readers can almost always expect in García Márquez's writing, like instances of humor, he does not stick to any clear and predetermined style template. In an interview with Marlise Simons, García Márquez noted:
In every book I try to make a different path [...]. One doesn't choose the style. You can investigate and try to discover what the best style would be for a theme. But the style is determined by the subject, by the mood of the times. If you try to use something that is not suitable, it just won't work. Then the critics build theories around that and they see things I hadn't seen. I only respond to our way of life, the life of the Caribbean.


García Márquez is also noted for leaving out seemingly important details and events so the reader is forced into a more participatory role in the story development. For example, in No one writes to the colonel
No One Writes to the Colonel

No One Writes to the Colonel is a novella written by the Colombian novelist and Nobel Prize for Literature winner Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It also gives its name to a short story collection....
 the main characters are not given names. This practice is influenced by Greek tragedies, such as Antigone
Antigone (Sophocles)

Antigone is a tragedy by Sophocles written before or in 442 BC. Chronologically, it is the third of the three Theban plays but was written first....
 and Oedipus Rex, in which important events occur off-stage and are left to the audience's imagination.

Realism and Magical Realism

Reality is an important theme in all of García Márquez's works. He has said of his early works (with the exception of Leaf Storm), "Nobody Writes to the Colonel, In Evil Hour, and Big Mama's Funeral all reflect the reality of life in Colombia and this theme determines the rational structure of the books. I don't regret having written them, but they belong to a kind of premeditated literature that offers too static and exclusive a vision of reality."

In his other works he has experimented more with less traditional approaches to reality, so that "the most frightful, the most unusual things are told with the deadpan expression". A commonly cited example is the physical and spiritual ascending into heaven of a character while she is hanging the laundry out to dry in One Hundred Years of Solitude
One Hundred Years of Solitude

One Hundred Years of Solitude is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning Colombian author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It was first published in Spanish language in 1967....
.
The style of these works fits in the "marvellous realm" described by the Cuban writer Alejo Carpentier
Alejo Carpentier

Alejo Carpentier y Valmont was a Cuban novelist, essay writer, and musicologist who greatly influenced Latin American literature during its famous Latin American Boom....
 and has been labeled as magical realism. Literary critic Michael Bell proposes an alternative understanding for García Márquez's style, as the category magic realism is criticized for being dichotimizing and exoticizing, "what is really at stake is a psychological suppleness which is able to inhabit unsentimentally the daytime world while remaining open to the promptings of those domains which modern culture has, by its own inner logic, necessarily marginalised or repressed." García Márquez and his friend Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza discuss his work in a similar way, "'The way you treat reality in your books... has been called magical realism. I have the feeling your European readers are usually aware of the magic of your stories but fail to see the reality behind it...' 'This is surely because their rationalism prevents them seeing that reality isn't limited to the price of tomatoes and eggs.'"

Themes


Solitude

The theme of solitude runs through much of García Márquez's works. As Pelayo notes, "Love in the Time of Cholera, like all of Gabriel García Márquez's work, explores the solitude of the individual and of human kind...portrayed through the solitude of love and of being in love".

In response to Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza's question, "If solitude is the theme of all your books, where should we look for the roots of this over-riding emotion? In your childhood perhaps?" García Márquez replied, "I think it's a problem everybody has. Everyone has his own way and means of expressing it. The feeling pervades the work of so many writers, although some of them may express it unconsciously."

In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, , he relates this theme of solitude to the Latin American experience, "The interpretation of our reality through patterns not our own, serves only to make us ever more unknown, ever less free, ever more solitary."

Macondo

Another important theme in many of García Márquez's work is the setting of the village he calls Macondo
Macondo

Macondo is a fictional town described in Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez's novel One Hundred Years of Solitude. It is the home town of the Buend?a family....
. He uses his home town of Aracataca, Colombia as a geographical reference to create this imaginary town, but the representation of the village is not limited to this specific area. García Márquez shares, "Macondo is not so much a place as a state of mind." Even when his stories do not take place in Macondo, there is often still a consistent lack of specificity to the location. So while they are often set with "a Caribbean coastline and an Andean hinterland... [the settings are] otherwise unspecified, in accordance with García Márquez's evident attempt to capture a more general regional myth rather than give a specific political analysis." "This fictional town has become well known in the literary world. As Stavans notes of Macondo, "its geography and inhabitants constantly invoked by teachers, politicians, and tourdepictsist agents..." makes it "...hard to believe it is a sheer fabrication." In Leaf Storm García Márquez depicts the realities of the Banana Boom in Macondo, which include a period of great wealth during the presence of the US companies and a period of depression upon the departure of the American banana companies. As well, Hundred Years of Solitude takes place in Macondo and tells the complete history of the fictional town from its founding to its doom.

In his autobiography, García Márquez explains his fascination with the word and concept Macondo. He describes a trip he made with his mother back to Aracataca as a young man:


The train stopped at a station that had no town, and a short while later it passed the only banana plantation along the route that had its name written over the gate: Macondo. This word had attracted my attention ever since the first trips I had made with my grandfather, but I discovered only as an adult that I liked its poetic resonance. I never heard anyone say it and did not even ask myself what it meant...I happened to read in an encyclopedia that it is a tropical tree resembling the Ceiba.


La violencia

In several of García Márquez's works, including No One Writes to the Colonel, Evil Hour, and Leaf Storm, he references la violencia (the violence), "a brutal civil war between conservatives and liberals that lasted into the 1960s, causing the deaths of several hundred thousand Colombians." Throughout all of his novels there are subtle references to la violencia, for example, characters living under various unjust situations like curfew, press censorship, and underground newspapers. Evil Hour, while not one of García Márquez's most famous novels, is notable for its portrayal of la violencia with its "fragmented portrayal of social disintegration provoked by la violencia". However, although García Márquez does portray the corrupt nature and the injustices of times like la violencia, he refuses to use his work as a platform for political propaganda. "For him, the duty of the revolutionary writer is to write well, and the ideal novel is one that moves its reader by its political and social content, and, at the same time, by its power to penetrate reality and expose its other side.

Legacy

García Márquez is an important part of the Latin American Boom
Latin American Boom

The Latin American Boom was a literary movement of the 1960s and 1970s when the work of a group of relatively young Latin American novelists became widely circulated in Europe and throughout the world....
 of literature. His work has challenged critics of Colombian literature to step out of the conservative criticism that had been dominant before the success of One Hundred Years of Solitude. In a review of literary criticism Robert Sims notes,


"García Márquez continues to cast a lengthy shadow in Colombia, Latin America, and the United States. Critical works on the 1982 Nobel laureate have reached industrial proportion and show no signs of abating. Moreover, García Márquez has galvanized Colombian literature in an unprecedented way by giving a tremendous impetus to Colombian literature. Indeed, he has become a touchstone for literature and criticism throughout the Americas as his work has created a certain attraction-repulsion among critics and writers while readers continue to devour new publications. No one can deny that García Márquez has helped rejuvenate, reformulate, and recontextualize literature and criticism in Colombia and the rest of Latin America."


Nobel Prize

In 1982,García Márquez received the Nobel Prize in Literature
Nobel Prize in Literature

The Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded annually, since 1901, to an author from any country who has, in the words from the will of Alfred Nobel, produced "in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction" ....
 "for his novels and short stories, in which the fantastic and the realistic are combined in a richly composed world of imagination, reflecting a continent's life and conflicts". His acceptance speech was entitled "Solitude of Latin America". García Márquez was the first Colombian and fourth Latin American to win a Nobel Prize for Literature. After becoming a Nobel laureate, García Márquez told a correspondent: "I have the impression that in giving me the prize they have taken into account the literature of the sub-continent and have awarded me as a way of awarding all of this literature."

Chain mail hoax

The recent years a chain mail
Chain Mail

"Chain Mail" is a Single by Manchester band James , released in March 1986 by Sire Records, the first after the band defected from Factory Records....
 with a text attributed to Márquez has been circulating the Internet
Internet

The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers, enabling users to share information along multiple channels. Typically, a computer that connects to the Internet can access information from a vast array of available server and other computers by moving information from them to the computer's local memory....
, often entitled "Farewell of a Genius". The text was allegedly written when Márquez learned about his cancer.

Mexican researcher Raúl Trejo Delarbre discovered that this text was authored by a Mexican ventriloquist called Johnny Welch and circulated the Internet in July 1999 anonymously. Soon after, Julio César Centeno published it in his site, attributing it to Márquez. In March 2000 it was published in a Nicaraguan paper which linked the text with Márquez' cancer.

Márquez said on this: "What hurts me most is the shame to believe that I would have authored such a "cute" text"

List of works


Novels

  • One Hundred Years of Solitude
    One Hundred Years of Solitude

    One Hundred Years of Solitude is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning Colombian author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It was first published in Spanish language in 1967....
     1967
  • The Autumn of the Patriarch
    The Autumn of the Patriarch

    The Autumn of the Patriarch is a novel written by Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez in 1975.A "poem on the solitude of power" according to the author, the novel is a flowing tract on the life of an eternal dictator....
     1975
  • Chronicle of a Death Foretold
    Chronicle of a Death Foretold

    'Chronicle of a Death Foretold' is a novella by Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez, published in 1981. It tells, in the form of a pseudo-journalistic reconstruction, the story of the murder of Santiago Nasar by the two Vicario brothers....
     1981
  • Love in the Time of Cholera
    Love in the Time of Cholera

    Love in the Time of Cholera is a novel by Nobel Prize winning Colombian author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez that was first published in Spanish language in 1985, with an English language translation released in 1988 by Alfred A....
     1985
  • The General in His Labyrinth
    The General in His Labyrinth

    The General in His Labyrinth is a novel by the Colombian writer and Nobel Prize for Literature Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It is a fictionalized account of the last days of Sim?n Bol?var, liberator and leader of Gran Colombia....
     1989
  • Of Love and Other Demons
    Of Love and Other Demons

    Of Love and Other Demons is a novel by Colombia author Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez, first published in 1994.In the prologue, Garcia Marquez claims the novel is the fictional representation of a legend the author was told by his Grandmother as a child; of a 12 year-old girl who contracts rabies but was believed to be a 'miracle-worker', with...
     1994
  • Memories of My Melancholy Whores
    Memories of My Melancholy Whores

    Memories of My Melancholy Whores is a novella by Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez.The book was originally published in Spanish in 2004, with an English translation by Edith Grossman published in October 2005....
     2004


Novellas

  • Leaf Storm
    Leaf Storm

    Leaf Storm is the common translation for Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez's novella La Hojarasca . First published in 1955, it took seven years to find a publisher....
     1955
  • No One Writes to the Colonel
    No One Writes to the Colonel

    No One Writes to the Colonel is a novella written by the Colombian novelist and Nobel Prize for Literature winner Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It also gives its name to a short story collection....
     published 1961 in Spanish (written in 1956-1957)
  • In Evil Hour
    In Evil Hour

    In Evil Hour is a novella by Colombian writer Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez, first published in 1962, republished in 1966, and translated into English by Gregory Rabassa in 1979....
     1962


Short Story Collections

  • Innocent Eréndira, and Other Stories 1978
  • Collected Stories 1984
  • Strange Pilgrims
    Strange Pilgrims

    'Strange Pilgrims' is a collection of twelve loosely-related short story by the Nobel Prize winning Colombian writer Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez....
     1993


Non Fiction

  • The Novel in Latin America: Dialogue 1968, with Mario Vargas Llosa
  • The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor
    The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor

    The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor is a work of non-fiction by Colombian writer Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. The full title is The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor: Who Drifted on a Liferaft for Ten Days Without Food or Water, Was Proclaimed a National Hero, Kissed by Beauty Queens, Made Rich Through Publicity, and Then Spurned by the Govern...
     1970
  • When I Was Happy and Undocumented 1972
  • The Solitude of Latin America 1982
  • The Abduction
    The Abduction

    The Abduction is an episode from the second season of Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. The two part episode first aired on April 4, 1994 and served as the CBS show's 40th and 41st installments....
     1983
  • The Fragrance of Guava 1982, with Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza
  • Clandestine in Chile 1986
  • News of a Kidnapping
    News of a Kidnapping

    News of a Kidnapping is a non-fiction book by Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez. It was first published in Spanish in 1996, with an English translation released in 1997....
     1996
  • A Country for Children 1998
  • Living to Tell the Tale
    Living to Tell the Tale

    Living to Tell the Tale is the first volume of the autobiography of Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez.The book was originally published in Spanish in 2002, with an English translation by Edith Grossman published in 2003....
     2002


See also

  • McOndo
    McOndo

    McOndo is a Latin American literary movement that seeks to distance itself from Latin America's long-dominant magical realist literary tradition....


External links


Films