Gabriel García Márquez: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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He has also immersed himself into the cinema, helping directors to turn some of his books into films.
He has also immersed himself into the cinema, helping directors to turn some of his books into films.


Nowadays, García Márquez's fame has become [[Its Popular Now It Sucks|a little awkward to Latin American writers]], since it has generated the impression that all the literature of the zone is about angels, jungles and countryside. As a countermovement, the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McOndo McOndo literary movement] has been created by writers trying to present a more actualized Latin America. He’s still respected by those writers as a good writer, however.
Nowadays, García Márquez's fame has become [[It's Popular, Now It Sucks|a little awkward to Latin American writers]], since it has generated the impression that all the literature of the zone is about angels, jungles and countryside. As a countermovement, the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McOndo McOndo literary movement] has been created by writers trying to present a more actualized Latin America. He’s still respected by those writers as a good writer, however.


Books:
Books:
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* [[Magic Realism]]: One of the [[Trope Maker|Trope Makers]], definitely [[Trope Codifier]].
* [[Magic Realism]]: One of the [[Trope Maker|Trope Makers]], definitely [[Trope Codifier]].
* [[Mind Screw]]
* [[Mind Screw]]
* [[Roman a Clef]]
* [[Roman à Clef]]
* [[Small Reference Pools]]: When people are asked to name a Latin American writer, García Márquez is one of the few names that come up.
* [[Small Reference Pools]]: When people are asked to name a Latin American writer, García Márquez is one of the few names that come up.
* [[Turn Out Like His Father]]
* [[Turn Out Like His Father]]

Revision as of 15:46, 8 January 2014

Gabriel García Márquez. The name that is synonymous with Magic Realism. Born in Colombia, the man has been on the writing scene for a very long time and produced a solid body of work. In 1982, he gained the Nobel Prize in literature. His book One Hundred Years of Solitude has become the definitive work of Magic Realism and is required reading in schools, not to mention his most famous book.

His books deal with themes like solitude, eternal cycles, Banana Republics, political disputes and civil wars, themes present in his life and the life of his country with distressful frequence.

He has also immersed himself into the cinema, helping directors to turn some of his books into films.

Nowadays, García Márquez's fame has become a little awkward to Latin American writers, since it has generated the impression that all the literature of the zone is about angels, jungles and countryside. As a countermovement, the McOndo literary movement has been created by writers trying to present a more actualized Latin America. He’s still respected by those writers as a good writer, however.

Books:

García Márquez’s works contain examples of: