New biography gets to the heart of Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Posted : Friday Jun 12, 2009 13:04:15 EDT
Gerald Martin’s biography of Colombian writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez, winner of the 1982 Nobel Prize in Literature, is so terrific, it makes a reviewer want to lurk around bookstores, urging readers to buy it. Really.
One reason is Martin’s rich material. Garcia Marquez has led an extraordinary life, not just as a writer but as a journalist and a public figure in the turbulent world of Latin American politics. Like soccer star Pele or Madonna, he’s known by “Gabo.”
Because of novels such as “One Hundred Years of Solitude” and “Love in the Time of Cholera,” the 82-year-old master of “magical realism” is admired by critics and read by millions — a rare achievement in the literary world. Like William Faulkner with his Yoknapatawpha County, Garcia Marquez has hewn an imaginary geography — “Macondo” — from the tropical Colombian backwater he knew as a child growing up in his beloved grandfather’s big house.
His books have made him famous, but his friendships and leftist political beliefs have made Garcia Marquez controversial. For three decades, he has been a close friend and public defender of Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
Martin, a British expert in Latin American literature who is fluent in Spanish, spent 17 years writing and researching this biography. Garcia Marquez calls Martin his “tolerated” biographer and sat for interviews.
Martin also spoke with Garcia Marquez’s wife, Mercedes, whom the author married in 1958. He interviewed their two sons, one of whom, Rodrigo Garcia, is a Hollywood writer and director.
Yet, remarkably, Martin has not allowed his research to swamp the biography. In a crisp, clear, compelling narrative, we learn of Garcia Marquez’s journey to manhood put in the context of Colombian culture and its often violent history. Martin traces Garcia Marquez’s decades as a journalist in Latin America and Europe. He also explores the roots of magical realism and details what winning the Nobel Prize in literature meant not just for Garcia Marquez but for Latin Americans.
Martin admires Garcia Marquez the writer but doesn’t worship the man who comes across charming but more shrewd than his man-of-the-people public persona suggests.
Without being invasive, Martin’s biography reveals the private Garcia Marquez, as a man and as a writer. The result is a biography that is fresh and insightful about one of the most popular and influential writers of the 20th century.
Leave a Comment
Most Viewed Stories
- Pentagon IG reviewing fatal Raptor crash
- Air Force preps flight attendants for VIP trips
- Guard general opposes A-10 removal at Ind. base
- AF Academy cadets’ commander up for 2nd star
- Marine scout snipers used Nazi SS logo
- Owner of troubled uniform store arrested
- The ‘Stan: An officer’s unvarnished view
- DoD to recommend new combat roles for women
- Report: Air Force fires men’s basketball coach
- Ala. panel: Military ID can prove citizenship
- Nellis airman killed in crash was from Ill.
- Staff sgt. offered TV tryout after viral video
- Tricare pharmacy merger worries lawmakers
Contests and Promotions
Enter our 2012 Red Carpet Contest!
Predict who will get the statues on Hollywood's big night and win a $200 Fandango Gift Card!
Click Here To Enter.
Win Tactical Night Vision Goggles!
Enter to Win the Military Times Sweepstakes!
Click Here To Enter.
Free Stickers
Click here and we'll send you a FREE AFGHANISTAN, IRAQ, VIETNAM, or DESERT STORM sticker.
Marketplace
Mil-Mall
2011 Insider's Guide To Military BenefitsThis handbook for military life includes essential information on pay and benefits, housing, education, health care and more.
Military Discounts
Save on your purchases!
In honor of your military service, you can find regular and name brand products at a special discount.






