Gabriel Garcia Márquez

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  • french frank
    Administrator/Moderator
    • Feb 2007
    • 30537

    Gabriel Garcia Márquez

    No note of the death of this celebrated Nobel prize-winner - which presumably means no one here has read much to influence them personally? I imagine he ranks with Borges as one of the internationally-recognised 20th-c. S.American writers, and along with Lorca to make a trio writing in Spanish? I ventured to buy one of his novellas (El coronel no tiene quien le escriba) - I thought I might manage to get through a short work in Spanish! But clearly I haven't touched on the great works like One Hundred Years of Solitude.

    Perhaps it's not valid to link him with Borges, who perhaps is so popular outside the Spanish-speaking world for being largely apolitical?
    It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
  • Richard Tarleton

    #2
    The first Hispanic author to spring to my mind in connection with Gabriel Garca Márquez is Mario Vargas Llosa, with whom he had a celebrated punch-up - I'm afraid I've never got anywhere with Borges

    Yes - I read 100 Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera in English, and following an OU Spanish diploma and corresponding improvement in my Spanish I read several of the shorter ones in the original. Crónica de una muerte anunciada is a straightforward tale with an air of Lorca-esque doom about it, La aventura de Miguel Littin clandestino en Chile the true story of a Chilean film-maker, who was under a ban from re-entering his homeland by the Pinochet government, making an undercover film under extremely dangerous circumstances. Another factual book is Noticias de un secuestro about a celebrated kidnapping by a Colombian drugs cartel. I've read some of the other shorter ones - La mala hora, El coronel... and La hojarasca (Fallen leaves) with varying degrees of ease. The vocab can be tricky, at least in his fiction - Vargas Llosa (whose book on Roger Casement, El sueño del celta, I reviewed on the What are you reading... thread) I find more straightforward. I don't altogether "get" magic realism, and need to read some criticism....time to have another go, I think.

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    • french frank
      Administrator/Moderator
      • Feb 2007
      • 30537

      #3
      Vargas Llosa was a name somewhere in the back of my mind which I couldn't pull out when needed! Not read any of his, either.

      Re Borges: I went on holiday once with a friend to Cyprus. She asked me if I'd brought anything to read which she could borrow. I gave her a volume of Borges. She appeared next morning with the book, handed it back and said, unselfconsciously, 'No thank you.'

      There was a rift between us thereafter.
      It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

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      • Richard Tarleton

        #4
        Originally posted by french frank View Post
        There was a rift between us thereafter.
        I bought El Aleph and Ficciones on spec a few years ago, but was baffled by them. I retain an open mind, but haven't found the way in.

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        • french frank
          Administrator/Moderator
          • Feb 2007
          • 30537

          #5
          Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
          I bought El Aleph and Ficciones on spec a few years ago, but was baffled by them. I retain an open mind, but haven't found the way in.
          The two ideas that remain fixed in my mind are always a) his personal version of the absurd and b) the very discreet humour - or perhaps sense of amusement - that pervades most of it. If neither 'speaks' to you, I imagine it is hard to appreciate the style.
          It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

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          • Richard Tarleton

            #6
            Thanks for that! I'll have another go.

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            • vinteuil
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 12984

              #7
              Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
              Thanks for that! I'll have another go.
              ... I wd suggest perhaps "The Garden of Forking Paths" and "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius".

              I love his dry olympian style....

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              • french frank
                Administrator/Moderator
                • Feb 2007
                • 30537

                #8
                Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
                I love his dry olympian style....
                Good description. Typical absurdity is in Funes el Memorioso where the memorious Funes invents a new system of counting in which every number is a word totally unconnected with any other (so when he gets to 1,000 he has 1,000 different words which he can remember in order). If I remember the narrator painstakingly suggests that this is a less useful system than one which operates in repeated patterns of ten which doesn't require such prodigious feats of memory ...

                Or get your mind round Pierre Ménard, autor del Quijote in which Ménard sets out to compose Don Quixote again, word for word. All described with laborious seriousness which is where the humour lies (for me, anyway).

                (Going to listen to A&C on the iPlayer tomorrow. Not in the mood this evening, after the first couple of scenes)
                It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

                Comment

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