Marquez, master of magical realism, dies at 87
Updated: 2014-04-18 07:40
(Agencies)
|
||||||||
In photos: Life of Garcia Marquez |
A prolific writer who started out as a newspaper reporter, Garcia Marquez's masterpiece was One Hundred Years of Solitude, a dream-like, dynastic epic that helped him win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1982.
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 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 6, 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. The characters are visited by ghosts, a plague of insomnia envelops Macondo, a child is born with a pig's tail and a priest levitates above the ground.
At times comical and bawdy, and at others tragic, it sold over 30 million copies and helped fuel a boom in Latin American fiction.
Garcia Marquez, a stocky man with a quick smile, thick mustache and curly hair, 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."
Tributes poured in following his death.
"He captured the pain and joy of our common humanity in settings both real and magical," said former US president Bill Clinton, who was a friend of the novelist.
"Your life, dear Gabo, will be remembered by all of us as a unique and singular gift, and as the most original story of all," Colombian pop star Shakira wrote on her website alongside a photograph of her hugging Garcia Marquez.
- Runners and their 4-legged friends race in New York
- Top 10 Chinese Internet firms eyeing IPOs in US
- Chinese cop cadets learn about US police work
- In Boston, warming up for, remembering marathon day
- Families of missing passengers face agonising wait
- Couple leave the city for 'Self-sufficiency Lab'in mountains
- Turning waste into something valuable
- Dignitaries put their foot down
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Beijing integrates with Tianjin, Hebei |
Enemies share eternity together |
Expats flee big, smoggy cities |
Life after an only child dies |
Parents put kindergartens to the test |
Nomads change for education |
Today's Top News
Scientists discover most earth-like planet
UN celebrates 2014 Chinese Language Day
4th US Navy official charged in bribery scheme
Nobel winner Marquez dies at 87
Chinese keen on Google Glass
Ferry's captain under probe
Texas seizes polygamist group's secluded ranch
In Boston, people remembering marathon day
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |