Gabriel García Márquez: Difference between revisions
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'''Gabriel García Márquez''' (1928<ref>In the introduction to the Cátedra edition of ''Cien años de soledad'', Jacques Joset places García Márquez's birthday as March 6, 1927. Joset cites García Márquez's own comment that he is "not very sure" about his year of birth, the author's father's recollection that his son was born before the Columbian banana workers strike of 1928, and the birth date listed on García Márquez's baptism record.<ref> - ) is a [[Colombia]]n author and Nobel Prize winner, well known for his novels in the [[magical realism|magical realist]] style. García Márquez was born in Aracataca, in the Magdalena Department of [[Colombia]]. He was raised by his mother's father, Colonel Nicolás Márquez. He attended the National University in Bogota and the University of Cartagena, after graduation, he worked as a reporter in Colombia and abroad for various Colombian newspapers until 1955, when ''El Espectador'', for which García Márquez was a correspondent based in Europe, was closed down by Rojas Pinilla, Colombia's dictator. | '''Gabriel García Márquez''' (1928<ref>In the introduction to the Cátedra edition of ''Cien años de soledad'', Jacques Joset places García Márquez's birthday as March 6, 1927. Joset cites García Márquez's own comment that he is "not very sure" about his year of birth, the author's father's recollection that his son was born before the Columbian banana workers strike of 1928, and the birth date listed on García Márquez's baptism record.</ref> - ) is a [[Colombia]]n author and Nobel Prize winner, well known for his novels in the [[magical realism|magical realist]] style. García Márquez was born in Aracataca, in the Magdalena Department of [[Colombia]]. He was raised by his mother's father, Colonel Nicolás Márquez. He attended the National University in Bogota and the University of Cartagena, after graduation, he worked as a reporter in Colombia and abroad for various Colombian newspapers until 1955, when ''El Espectador'', for which García Márquez was a correspondent based in Europe, was closed down by Rojas Pinilla, Colombia's dictator. | ||
García Márquez published his first book of short stories, ''La hojarasca'' (''Leaf Storm''), that year. His first novel, ''El coronel no tiene quien le escriba'' (''Nobody writes to the Colonel'') was published in 1961. He has published numerous other works since then, most prominently ''Cien Años de Soledad'' (''One Hundred Years of Solitude'') in 1967, and was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1982. He continues to write in the style and of the places of his earlier works. | García Márquez published his first book of short stories, ''La hojarasca'' (''Leaf Storm''), that year. His first novel, ''El coronel no tiene quien le escriba'' (''Nobody writes to the Colonel'') was published in 1961. He has published numerous other works since then, most prominently ''Cien Años de Soledad'' (''One Hundred Years of Solitude'') in 1967, and was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1982. He continues to write in the style and of the places of his earlier works. | ||
==Notes== | |||
<references /> | |||
==Sources== | ==Sources== |
Revision as of 12:34, 12 November 2008
Gabriel García Márquez (1928[1] - ) is a Colombian author and Nobel Prize winner, well known for his novels in the magical realist style. García Márquez was born in Aracataca, in the Magdalena Department of Colombia. He was raised by his mother's father, Colonel Nicolás Márquez. He attended the National University in Bogota and the University of Cartagena, after graduation, he worked as a reporter in Colombia and abroad for various Colombian newspapers until 1955, when El Espectador, for which García Márquez was a correspondent based in Europe, was closed down by Rojas Pinilla, Colombia's dictator.
García Márquez published his first book of short stories, La hojarasca (Leaf Storm), that year. His first novel, El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (Nobody writes to the Colonel) was published in 1961. He has published numerous other works since then, most prominently Cien Años de Soledad (One Hundred Years of Solitude) in 1967, and was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1982. He continues to write in the style and of the places of his earlier works.
Notes
- ↑ In the introduction to the Cátedra edition of Cien años de soledad, Jacques Joset places García Márquez's birthday as March 6, 1927. Joset cites García Márquez's own comment that he is "not very sure" about his year of birth, the author's father's recollection that his son was born before the Columbian banana workers strike of 1928, and the birth date listed on García Márquez's baptism record.
Sources
- http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1982/marquez-bio.html
- http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/marquez.htm
- http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1982/marquez-bibl.html
Further reading
- http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1982/marquez-lecture-e.html - Nobel lecture
- http://www.themodernword.com/gabo/ - links to reviews, essays, etc.