Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Updated EditionHarold Bloom Infobase Publishing, 2009 Editor Harold Bloom cites the literary origins of Gabriel García Márquez as "Faulkner, crossed by Kafka." A Colombian writer and Nobel Prize winner, Márquez is best known for his novels One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in th |
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
Interview with Gabriel Garcia Marquez | 7 |
The Writers Life | 33 |
Hemingways Presence in the Early Short Fiction 195055 | 55 |
Gabriel Garcia Marquez and AfroAmerican Literature | 67 |
Politicised Ghosts in One Hundred Years of Solitude The House of the Spirits and Beloved | 83 |
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez | 95 |
The End of Erendiras Prostitution | 107 |
Rereadings of Garcia Marquezs Cronica de una Muerte Anunciada | 159 |
Apropos of Love in the Times of Cholera | 169 |
Apocalypse and Human Time in the Fiction of Gabriel Garcia Marquez | 183 |
Chronology | 217 |
Contributors | 221 |
Bibliography | 225 |
Acknowledgments | 229 |
231 | |
The Autumn of the Patriarch 1975 | 123 |
Language and Power in The Autumn of the Patriarch | 145 |
Términos y frases comunes
años apocalyptic appears attempts Aureliano Autumn become beginning believe Bogotá Buendía called Caribbean chapter characters Cholera Colombian complete critics cultural death describes discussion Eréndira existence experience fact Faulkner fiction find first friends future Gabriel García Márquez General’s give happened human Hundred important interest José language later Latin American leave lines literary literature live look Macondo magic means memory months murder narrative narrator nature never novel once opening original past patriarch political present Press prostitution provides published reader reality reference reported seems seen sense sentence short situation Solitude Spanish speech story structure suggests tell things town understand University voice women writing written York