Arango criticizes and analyzes eight authors (Hernán Cortéz, José Eustasio Rivera, Miguel Angel Asturias, Mariano Azuela, Agustín Yañéz, Juan Rulfo, Gabriel García Márquez, and Isabel Allende)on the impact of their writing, their styles, and their lives.
This volume is edited, and contains an introduction by, Harold Bloom. It also includes an interview with García Márquez, a biography, various critical essays of his works, bibliographic references, and an index.
Cáceres, Spain : Universidad de Extremadura, Servicio de Publicaciones
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
260 p.
Notes:
The book analyzes Gabriel García Márquez's journalistic history alongside his ability to compose great novels. Molina chooses different journalistic and literary texts from García Márquez, written at different times, to demonstrate how he combines his storytelling ability and his journalistic craft.
Originally presented as the author's doctoral thesis at Universität Leipzig in 2003, this book discusses Latin American historical fiction, focusing on the named authors.
Edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom. Contains a biography, a few essays by García Márquez himself, and an essay on magical realism by Gerald Martin.
Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Chile : Ediciones Universitarias de Valparaíso
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
5 : 93p.
Notes:
The authors present myth as an effective instrument for giving perfection, sense and correctness to chaos, and they also humorize the brutal and tragic of a world, decaying without remedy.
Hildensheim, Zürich, and New York : Georg Olms Verlag
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
297p.
Notes:
Includes the following relevant articles: "¿Descolonización de la historia? El caso de la novela histórica en la región norteandina" by Brigitte König pp. 51-72; and "¿Descolonización de la historia? El caso de la historiografía en la región norteandina" by Hans-Joachim König pp. 27-49.
Zapata reminisces Gabriel García Márquez's life and works with a candid narrative of thirty-three years since he has been introduced to Marquez and his One Hundred Years of Solitude. It is illustrated with caricatures by Pancho, Zapata, Ras, and Ugo as well as pictures of distinctive facets of Márquez's life and covers of several of his works. There is also a drawing of "Remedios" done by Gabriel García Márquez himself.