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Thread: Chasing Gabriel Garcia Marquez

  1. #1

    Chasing Gabriel Garcia Marquez

    Has anyone here read works by Gabriel Garcia Marquez? I am itching to discuss "One Hundred Years of Solitude" with someone...

  2. #2
    Two Gun Kid Idril's Avatar
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    I've read 3 of his books, including One Hundred Years of Solitude. We read that book for the forum book club. Here's the link, you can see what other people have had to say about the it.
    the luminous grass of the prairie hides
    feet lovely and still as sleeping doves,
    porcelain bones strong enough to carry a life,
    but weighty and unmovable
    As black Dakota hills.
    ~ Riesa

  3. #3
    Perhaps an island.... Moira's Avatar
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    I've read One Hundred Years of Solitude and loved it. Pretty confusing characters but the fictional town and absurd/ magical happenings, symbols ...... beautiful.
    Also, i've read Memories of My Melancholy Whores, a novella which did not impress me much.

  4. #4
    malkavian manolia's Avatar
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    I've read "one hundred years of solitude" too. Very nice but i had to take pen and paper..with all these names.

  5. #5
    it took me nearly 3 months to finish this book (amid all my daily activities) and unexpectedly it has seeped into my system. the way it ended caught me off guard, although i was somehow expecting it. real time & fiction time smoothly merged into a literary work! but it was explained by the author himself that the storytelling style is exactly the same method gabo marquez's grandma would usually employ when narrating stories. as if fantasy/magic is the same as reality. interchangeable even. i guess this is the style of some latin americans (not only of writers, but also of ordinary folks).
    Last edited by nagmalitongyawa; 05-26-2007 at 11:43 AM. Reason: typographical errors 0_o

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    dum spiro, spero Nossa's Avatar
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    I read One Hundered Years of Solitude..and started reading Love In The Time Of Cholera...but couldn't finish it..YET!! lol
    I was a little confused by the names and some of the events that took place at the begining of One Hundred Years of Solitude...I actually had to re-read some parts to get the idea..lol
    But it's a GREAT book regardless...and it's def. worth reading!
    I'm the patron saint of the denial,
    With an angel face and a taste for suicidal.

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    Fingertips of Fury B-Mental's Avatar
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    I've read Love in the time of Cholera, and loved it. A little less enthusiastic about 100 years though, too many insanities.
    "I am glad to learn my friend that you had not yet submitted yourself to any of the mouldy laws of Literature."
    -John Muir


    "My candle burns at both ends; It will not last the night; But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends - It gives a lovely light"
    -Edna St. Vincent Millay

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    mind your back chasestalling's Avatar
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    borges has a story, circular ruins i think it was, where the protagonist, who is on the verge of death, realizes that he's a figment of someone else's imagination. i wouldn't be surprised if garcia marquez, who has cited borges as an influence, had conceived of melquiades and the parchments as a sort of tribute to borges.
    Last edited by chasestalling; 05-27-2007 at 08:35 PM. Reason: oops

  9. #9
    Shinigami wannabe malwethien's Avatar
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    count me in with those who have read 100 Years of Solitude and loved it I've also read Love in Time of Cholera and Love and Other Demons (?) and his autobiorgraphy, Living to Tell the Tale, which is fantastic!! A must read! I didn't like ..Cholera.. that much though
    "Deep in the fundamental heart of mind and universe...there is a reason."

    - Douglas Adams

  10. #10
    i've read 100 years alone a month ago or so...and just fell in love with it The way he narrates the story and the plot itself is simply fantastic. Following the family tree is a challenge, though

  11. #11
    Fingertips of Fury B-Mental's Avatar
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    I thought the part about all of the illegitimate sons was actually quite funny. I just felt for the women that would be duped by such a "hero"
    "I am glad to learn my friend that you had not yet submitted yourself to any of the mouldy laws of Literature."
    -John Muir


    "My candle burns at both ends; It will not last the night; But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends - It gives a lovely light"
    -Edna St. Vincent Millay

  12. #12
    I read One Hundred Year's Of Solitude and I had to wade through it, because my Spanish isn't good enough, and that was what I read it in. I really liked A Chronicle of a Death Foretold though.

  13. #13
    Registered User littlewing53's Avatar
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    i've read solitude and cholera a few times over the years...really enjoyed the color of his tales...and his writing is hilarious as well as sometimes mystical...

  14. #14
    Two Gun Kid Idril's Avatar
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    I've read 100 Hundred Years of Solitude, Love in the Time of Cholera and Autumn of the Patriarch and I enjoyed them all on some level. Patriarch was a little hard to get through simply because of it's form, no paragraphs, sentences that could be up to 10 pages long and the constant switch in narrators and perspective but the characters and story were absolutely fascinating. Again, it was heavy on the surreal which is one of the things I've come to really like about Marquez.
    the luminous grass of the prairie hides
    feet lovely and still as sleeping doves,
    porcelain bones strong enough to carry a life,
    but weighty and unmovable
    As black Dakota hills.
    ~ Riesa

  15. #15
    Pièce de Résistance Scheherazade's Avatar
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    Both Cholera and Solitude have excellent openings; the kind one would never forget.
    ~
    "It is not that I am mad; it is only that my head is different from yours.”
    ~


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