RIP Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

AndyRM

XOXO
Location
North Shields
Game over for two of my literary heroes in the space of a week.

Sad times.
 

ASC1951

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
[QUOTE 3033511, member: 259"]I'm probably not alone in that I've never been able to finish that solitude book.[/QUOTE]Love in the Time of Cholera is a lot better IMO.
 

Pat "5mph"

A kilogrammicaly challenged woman
Moderator
Location
Glasgow
[QUOTE 3033511, member: 259"]I'm probably not alone in that I've never been able to finish that solitude book.[/QUOTE]
You're kidding! It's one of my favorite works of fiction :smile:
 

AndyRM

XOXO
Location
North Shields
jeez, it's just a book... why idolize those who put letters onto paper?

Ultimately, you are right and perhaps describing Marquez (and Townsend) as heroes was an exaggeration.

However, there can be no doubting their significance and importance in the world of literature. I'm not normally one to feel anything when someone 'of note' dies, but I did pause and feel a moment of sadness when I learned of these deaths.

Weird really, because I'm normally a heartless bastard.
 

MikeG

Guru
Location
Suffolk
I'll go as far as to say that he was one of the best authors ever. He'll be talked about in future in the same breath as Mark Twain and Dickens, and he surpasses even them when it comes to opening lines for a book. How about this utter gem from 100 Years of Solitude:
Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.

My only gripe with his books was that so many of the characters had such similar names that I had to constantly refer to a list to see who was who. A minor inconvenience.

The man was an utter genius, and the world is a little duller today.

Mike
 

MikeG

Guru
Location
Suffolk
That in itself makes his writing self evidently second tier at best. What goods a story if you need a crib sheet for the cast?

Try reading the Gulag Archipeligo without a crib sheet, or Anna Karenina, or even some Shakespeare. Hell, even Wilbur-bl**dy-Smith or Geoffrey Archer can have a confusing cast of dozens. Your point is facile.

Frankly, if you have no interest in reading, and no interest in Marquez, why are you bothering with this thread?
 

ASC1951

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
I'll go as far as to say that he was one of the best authors ever. He'll be talked about in future in the same breath as Mark Twain and Dickens..
Oof, that's a big claim. I like Twain and find Dickens dull, but not many people would put Twain in the first rank of the last 150 years, let alone 'ever'. Marquez is outstanding in a very specific genre but even in the 20th century there are a dozen or more writers at his level.
 

MikeG

Guru
Location
Suffolk
Oof, that's a big claim. I like Twain and find Dickens dull, but not many people would put Twain in the first rank of the last 150 years, let alone 'ever'. Marquez is outstanding in a very specific genre but even in the 20th century there are a dozen or more writers at his level.

You may find that many Americans think rather more highly of Twain than we generally do, and would certainly put him in the "best ever" category. And yep, I stick by my big claim.........Marquez is amongst the best ever. Funnily enough, one of the guests on Newsnight last night said exactly the same thing.
 

ASC1951

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
You may find that many Americans think rather more highly of Twain than we generally do, and would certainly put him in the "best ever" category.
I'm sure they do; and he is certainly one of their 'best ever'; even if not many people have read anything beyond Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn.
And yep, I stick by my big claim.........Marquez is amongst the best ever. ...
Good for you. That's the great thing about works of art, it's only your own opinion that actually matters.
 
Top Bottom