Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
March, 2004
Published:
Madison, WI : Madison Newspapers, Inc.
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
9A Editorial
Notes:
Review and commentary on Brazilian mystery writer Luiz Alfredo Garcia-Roza, where a comparison is drawn: "Some critics have claimed that if Gabriel García Márquez had written crime novels, they would read much like Garcia-Roza's novels, suffused with atmosphere and often struck with wonder at the power of human interaction to both heal and wound."
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
October 23, 2004
Published:
Canberra, Australia : The Federal Capital Press of Australia
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
19
Notes:
"The Booker Prize, under fire for concentrating on fashionable and quirky writers, will attempt to regain its reputation for high seriousness with the launch of the "super Booker," a worldwide search for the living greats of fiction... The Independent understands that the reading list for the inaugural international prize - compiled at a recent secret meeting in Rome - already includes V.S. Naipul, the 2001 Nobel prize-winner from Trinidad; Margaret Atwood, the Canadian who won the Booker in 2000; John Updike, the Pulitzer prize-winner; Gabriel García Márquez, the master of magic realism; and Philip Roth, whose collected works are soon to appear in a Library of America edition."
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
January, 2004
Published:
Salon.com
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Notes:
Viewed on January 24, 2008.||"The parade of literary fashion invariably passes, and Gabriel García Márquez's Macondo, the folksy, fictional village that embodied and, in part, defined the notion of magical realism, has been replaced by McOndo, a contemporary Latin American literary trend of gritty, urban realism, its name a takeoff on García Márquez's Macondo and a combination of the words "McDonald's," "Macintosh," and "condo.""
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
November, 2002
Published:
Montevideo, Uruguay : El País
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Notes:
Viewed on 24 January, 2008.|In homage to Gabriel García Márquez and to commemorate the twenty years since his winning the Nobel Prize, the tenth of December, El general en su laberinto was read aloud from beginning to end.
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
September, 2002
Published:
La Paz, Bolivia : El Diario
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
Sección Cultural
Notes:
The American filmmaker, Francis Ford Coppola, readily admitted that he would like to make a film about the Liberator, Simón Bolívar. And for that, it could be based on a novel by the Colombian author, Gabriel García Márquez, particularly The General in his Labyrinth, with the help of the author himself.
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
Jan-Feb 2008
Published:
United States : Organization of American States
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
60(1) : p.60
Notes:
Pena writes: "So much has been written about Gabriel García Márquez that it is as if a light had been shined through a prism, casting an entire rainbow of opinions. The author's eightieth birthday and the fortieth anniversary of the publication of One Hundred Years of Solitude have led the literary world and the media in general to celebrate the personality and work of this icon of letters."
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
unknown
Published:
Austin, TX : The Austin American Statesman
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
K5
Notes:
"This is the voice that the author found in One Hundred Years of Solitude but the voice that narrates Living to Tell the Tale, the first projected three-volume memoir, is more journalistic, more reminiscent of his earlier works. And that, it turns out, is a stroke of genius."
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
unknown
Published:
Havana, Cuba : Ediciones ICAICS Martin Luther King, Jr Memorial Center
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Notes:
Viewed on January 15, 2008.|Also published in The Nation: www.thenation.com.| "By artistic choice he has instead constructed a memoir as close in form to a novel as perhaps has even been written. It opens with the arrival of his mother in Barranquilla, to take her son- then 22- back with her to sell the family house in Aracataca, on the trip that made him the novelist he became, and ends with the ultimatum he wrote on a plane to Geneva, five years later, that made the elusive sweetheart of his adolescence his future wife."