Garcia Marquez died at his home in Mexico
City, a source close to his family said. He had returned home from
hospital last week after what doctors said was a bout of pneumonia.
Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos confirmed the death.
Known affectionately to friends and fans as
’Gabo’, Garcia Marquez was Latin America‘s best-known author and most
beloved author and his books have sold in the tens of millions.
Although he produced stories, essays and
several short novels such as ‘Leaf Storm’ and ‘No One Writes to the
Colonel’ in the 1950s and early 1960s, he struggled for years to find
his voice as a novelist.
But he then found it in dramatic fashion with
‘One Hundred Years of Solitude,’ an instant success on publication in
1967 that was dubbed ‘Latin America‘s Don Quixote’ by late Mexican
author Carlos Fuentes.
It tells the story of seven generations of the
Buendia family in the fictional village of Macondo, based on the languid
town of Aracataca close to Colombia‘s Caribbean coast where Garcia
Marquez was born on March 6th, 1927 and raised by his maternal
grandparents.
In the novel, Garcia Marquez combines
miraculous and supernatural events with the details of everyday life and
the political realities of Latin America.
At times comical, others tragic, it sold more than 30 million copies and helped fuel a boom in Latin American fiction.
Garcia Marquez said he found inspiration for
the novel by drawing on childhood memories of his grandmother‘s stories -
laced with folklore and superstition but delivered with the straightest
of faces.
“She told things that sounded supernatural and
fantastic, but she told them with complete naturalness,“ he said in a
1981 interview. “I discovered that what I had to do was believe in them
myself, and write them with the same expression with which my
grandmother told them: with a brick face.“
Garcia Marquez was one of the prime exponents
of magical realism, a genre he described as embodying “myth, magic and
other extraordinary phenomenon.“
It was a turbulent period in much of Latin
America, when chaos was often the norm and reality verged on the
surreal, and magical realism struck a chord.
“In his novels and short stories we are led
into this peculiar place where the miraculous and the real converge. The
extravagant flight of his own fantasy combines with traditional folk
tales and facts, literary allusions and tangible - at times obtrusively
graphic - descriptions approaching the matter-of-factness of reportaje,“
the Swedish Academy said when it awarded Garcia Marquez the Nobel Prize
in 1982.
Although ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’ was
his most popular creation, other classics from Garcia Marquez included
’Autumn of the Patriarch’, ‘Love in the Time of Cholera“ and “Chronicle
of a Death Foretold’.
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