Godfather of magic realism, Garcia Marquez dies at 87

Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Gabriel Garcia Marquez: godfather of magic realism

Gabriel Garcia Marquez: godfather of magic realism
Gabriel Garcia Marquez: godfather of magic realism

Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the Nobel-winning Colombian author who used magical realism to tell epic stories of love, family and dictatorship in Latin America, died on 17 April at the age of 87.

Known affectionately as “Gabo,” the author of “One Hundred Years of Solitude” and “Love in the Time of Cholera” became one of the most popular Latin American novelists in the world and the godfather of a literary movement that witnessed a continent in turmoil.

Marquez was a colorful character who befriended Cuban leader Fidel Castro, got punched by fellow Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa and joked that he wrote so that his friends would love him.

“One thousand years of solitude and sadness for the death of the greatest Colombian of all time,” Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos wrote on Twitter.

The writer had made fewer public appearances in recent years and was hospitalized for pneumonia on 31 March, returned to his Mexico City home a week later to recover there.

The cause of death is not immediately known but Mexican media said his wife Mercedes and two sons were by his side at home.

Born March 6, 1927, in the village of Aracataca on Colombia’s Caribbean coast, Garcia Marquez was the son of a telegraph operator.

He was raised by his grandparents and aunts in a tropical culture influenced by the heritage of Spanish settlers, indigenous populations and black slaves. His grandfather was a retired colonel.

The exotic legends of his homeland inspired him to write profusely, including his masterpiece, “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” which was translated into 35 languages and sold more than 30 million copies.

The book, published in 1967, is a historical and literary saga about a family from the imaginary Caribbean village of Macondo between the 19th and 20th century — a novel that turned the man with the mustache and thick eyebrows into an international star.

Garcia Marquez
Garcia Marquez

Garcia Marquez wrote the novel after moving to Mexico City in 1961, taking a long bus ride from New York with his wife, Mercedes Barcha, and son Rodrigo.

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His second son, Gonzalo, was born a year later in the Mexican capital, where he lived for more than three decades.

He liked to say that he arrived in Mexico City “without a name or a penny in my pocket.”

The writer faced financial hardship, working for advertising agencies, penning screenplays and editing small magazines.

“As long as there was whisky, there was no misery,” Garcia Marquez quipped.

He owed nine months of rent payments when he penned “One Hundred Years of Solitude” and could only afford to send half of his manuscript to his editor in Argentina.

Later, the author realised that he had sent the final half of the book, forcing him to scramble to find more money to send the rest.

Garcia Marquez wore a white liqui-liqui, a traditional costume with a high collar from his region, to receive his Nobel prize in Sweden in 1982.

The Nobel committee rewarded him for books “in which the fantastic and the realistic are combined in a richly composed world of imagination, reflecting a continent’s life and conflicts.”

In his Nobel speech, the writer said it was the “outsized reality” of brutal dictatorships and civil wars in Latin America, “and not just its literary expression,” that got the attention of the Swedish Academy of Letters.

His other famous books include “Chronicle of a Death Foretold,” “The General in His Labyrinth” and his autobiography “Living to Tell the Tale.”

His final novel, “Memories of My Melancholy Whores,” was published in 2004.

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