Gabriel Garcia Marquez was admitted to hospital in Mexico, where he has lived for the past three decades, on March 31,2014 suffering from lung and urinary infections
Gabriel Garcia Marquez spent 8 days there before returning home to his family, who said in a statement at the time that his health was ‘stable’ but ‘fragile’.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez was awarded the Nobel prize in 1982 and is widely considered to be one of the best known Spanish language authors
Gabriel Garcia Marquez started his career as a journalist before becoming one of the forefathers of the narrative literary form known as 'new journalism'
Gabriel Garcia Marquez fled to Europe when a dictatorship took control of Colombia
Gabriel Garcia Marquez was
denied access to the U.S. for years because of his politics but grew
close to President Clinton when the author condemned his impeachment
During his career Gabriel Garcia Marquez achieved literary celebrity which spawned comparisons to Mark Twain and Charles Dickens
Gabriel Garcia Marquez behind a wife and two sons
Front page from a local newspaper announcing the death of Colombian 1982 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez, in Cali, Valle del Cauca department, Colombia, on April 17, 2014
Front page from a local newspaper announcing the death of Colombian 1982 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez, in Cali, Valle del Cauca department, Colombia, on April 17, 2014
Gabriel Farcia Marquez Timeline -March 06,1927 - April 17,2014
1927 - Garcia Marquez is born on March 6 in Aracataca, a backwater
banana-growing town near Colombia's Caribbean coast. The oldest child of
a large family, he spends part of his childhood living with his
grandparents and is especially close to his grandfather, a retired army
man who inspired the novel "No One Writes to the Colonel."
1940 - Garcia Marquez moves to Barranquilla, a port city famous for its Carnival, to start high school.
1947
- He studies law at the National University in the Colombian capital
Bogota and has two short stories published in the El Espectador
newspaper.
1948-1950 - After riots force the National University
to close and Garcia Marquez returns to Barranquilla, where he works as a
reporter and starts writing his first novel, "Leaf Storm."
1954 -
Garcia Marquez works for El Espectador. His tale about a Colombian
sailor who survived a high-seas shipwreck, published in installments,
causes controversy in Colombia.
1955-1957 - "Leaf Storm" is published. He lives in Paris, publishing essays about his travels in communist eastern Europe.
1958 - Garcia Marquez marries Mercedes Barcha in Barranquilla. They remain married for the rest of his life.
1959
- Soon after Fidel Castro's rise to power In a revolution, Garcia
Marquez travels to Cuba on Castro's invitation. They become close
friends. Mercedes gives birth to the couple's first son, Rodrigo.
1960-1961
- Garcia Marquez lives in Cuba for a short time, before moving the
family to Mexico where he rubs shoulders with the country's literati,
including author Carlos Fuentes. "No one Writes to the Colonel" is
published.
1962-1966 - The couple's second son, Gonzalo, is born.
Garcia Marquez writes several screenplays and works for publishers and
advertising agencies. He spends nearly two years writing "One Hundred
Years of Solitude."
1967 - "One Hundred Years of Solitude" is
published in June, earning Garcia Marquez recognition and accolades
around the world. The family moves to Spain, staying until 1975.
1975-1976
- "Autumn of the Patriarch," inspired by various Latin American
dictators, is published. Garcia Marquez is punched in the face by
Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa in a dispute that triggers endless
speculation over why they fell out.
1979-1981 - He divides his
time between Colombia and Mexico. During a trip to Europe, he meets Pope
John Paul II. He begins work on "Chronicle of a Death Foretold."
1982 - Garcia Marquez wins the Noble Prize for Literature.
1983-1987 - "Love in the Time of Cholera" is published, "Chronicle of a Death Foretold" is made into a film.
1989 - "The General in his Labyrinth," about the final days of South American independence leader Simon Bolivar, is published.
1994
- Garcia Marquez establishes the Foundation for New Ibero-American
Journalism to promote democracy and independent journalism in Latin
America.
1996 - "News of a Kidnapping", a non-fiction account of
the kidnapping of several prominent figures in Colombia by drug lord
Pablo Escobar is published.
1999 - Garcia Marquez battles lymphatic cancer, which goes into remission after chemotherapy treatment.
2002-2004
- He publishes his memoir "Living to Tell the Tale" in 2002. Two years
later, "Memories of My Melancholy Whores" is released to mixed reviews.
2010-2012
- Garcia Marquez's editor says he is working on a new novel, titled
"We'll See Each Other in August." A younger brother, Jaime, says that
the author is suffering from dementia and can no longer write.
2014 - Garcia Marquez dies at his home in Mexico City.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez Novels
One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967)
Autumn of the Patriarch (1975)
Love in the Time of Cholera (1985)
The General in His Labyrinth (1989)
Of Love and Other Demons (1994)
The story deals with the fictional town of Macondo, whose residents become infected by insomnia that shrouds them in forgetfulness.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez with Fidel Castro in 2000
Gabriel Garcia Marquez with Bill Clinton in 2007
Tributes to Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos
also paid tribute to the author on Twitter, saying: ‘One Hundred Years
of Solitude and sadness for the death of the greatest Colombian of all
time.’
Former US president Bill Clinton said: ‘From the time I read One Hundred Years of Solitude more than 40 years ago, I was always amazed by his unique gifts of imagination, clarity of thought, and emotional honesty... I was honoured to be his friend and to know his great heart and brilliant mind for more than 20 years.’
Former US president Bill Clinton said: ‘From the time I read One Hundred Years of Solitude more than 40 years ago, I was always amazed by his unique gifts of imagination, clarity of thought, and emotional honesty... I was honoured to be his friend and to know his great heart and brilliant mind for more than 20 years.’
Booker Prize-winning
author Ian McEwan said: ‘One would have to go back to Dickens to find a
writer of the very highest literary quality who commanded such
extraordinary persuasive powers over whole populations.
'It really is an extraordinary phenomenon, his literary career.’
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