2014-04-18

By Anahi Rama

MEXICO CITY Thu Apr 17, 2014 7:38pm EDT




1 of 7. Colombian Nobel Prize laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez stands outside his house on his 87th birthday in Mexico City in this March 6, 2014 file photo.

Credit: Reuters/Edgard Garrido/Files

<span id="articleText"><span id="midArticle_start"/> MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the Colombian author whose beguiling stories of love and longing brought Latin America to life for millions of readers and put magical realism on the literary map, died on Thursday. He was 87.

<span id="midArticle_1"/>A prolific writer who started out as a newspaper reporter, Garcia Marquez's masterpiece was "One Hundred Years of Solitude," a dream-like, dynastic epic that helped him win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1982.

<span id="midArticle_2"/>Garcia Marquez died at his home in Mexico City. He had returned home from hospital last week after a bout of pneumonia.

<span id="midArticle_3"/>Known affectionately to friends and fans as "Gabo," Garcia Marquez was Latin America's best-known and most beloved author and his books have sold in the tens of millions.

<span id="midArticle_4"/>Although he produced stories, essays and several short novels such as "Leaf Storm" and "No One Writes to the Colonel" in the 1950s and early 1960s, he struggled for years to find his voice as a novelist.

<span id="midArticle_5"/>But he then found it in dramatic fashion with "One Hundred Years of Solitude," an instant success on publication in 1967 that was dubbed "Latin America's Don Quixote" by late Mexican author Carlos Fuentes.

<span id="midArticle_6"/>It tells the story of seven generations of the Buendia family in the fictional village of Macondo, based on the languid town of Aracataca close to Colombia's Caribbean coast where Garcia Marquez was born on March 6, 1927, and raised by his maternal grandparents.

<span id="midArticle_7"/>In the novel, Garcia Marquez combines miraculous and supernatural events with the details of everyday life and the political realities of Latin America. The characters are visited by ghosts, a plague of insomnia envelops Macondo, a child is born with a pig's tail and a priest levitates above the ground.

<span id="midArticle_8"/>At times comical and bawdy, and at others tragic, it sold over 30 million copies, was published in dozens of languages and helped fuel a boom in Latin American fiction.

<span id="midArticle_9"/>Garcia Marquez, a stocky man with a quick smile, thick mustache and curly hair, said he found inspiration for the novel by drawing on childhood memories of his grandmother's stories - laced with folklore and superstition but delivered with the straightest of faces.

<span id="midArticle_10"/>"She told things that sounded supernatural and fantastic, but she told them with complete naturalness," he said in a 1981 interview. "I discovered that what I had to do was believe in them myself, and write them with the same expression with which my grandmother told them: with a brick face."

<span id="midArticle_11"/>Tributes poured in following his death.

<span id="midArticle_12"/>"The world has lost one of its greatest visionary writers - and one of my favorites from the time I was young," said U.S. President Barack Obama.

<span id="midArticle_13"/>"Your life, dear Gabo, will be remembered by all of us as a unique and singular gift, and as the most original story of all," Colombian pop star Shakira wrote on her website alongside a photograph of her hugging Garcia Marquez.

<span id="midArticle_14"/>MAGIC AND REALITY

<span id="midArticle_15"/>Garcia Marquez was one of the prime exponents of magical realism, a genre he described as embodying "myth, magic and other extraordinary phenomena."

<span id="midArticle_0"/>It was a turbulent period in much of Latin America, when chaos was often the norm and reality verged on the surreal, and magical realism struck a chord.

<span id="midArticle_1"/>"In his novels and short stories we are led into this peculiar place where the miraculous and the real converge. The extravagant flight of his own fantasy combines with traditional folk tales and facts, literary allusions and tangible - at times obtrusively graphic - descriptions approaching the matter-of-factness of reportage," the Swedish Academy said when it awarded Garcia Marquez the Nobel Prize in 1982.

<span id="midArticle_2"/>Although "One Hundred Years of Solitude" was his most popular creation, other classics from Garcia Marquez included "Autumn of the Patriarch", "Love in the Time of Cholera" and "Chronicle of a Death Foretold".

<span id="midArticle_3"/>He admired Franz Kafka's "Metamorphosis" and was also influenced by esteemed Latin American writers Juan Rulfo of Mexico and Argentina's Jorge Luis Borges.

<span id="midArticle_4"/>U.S. author William Faulkner inspired Garcia Marquez to create "the atmosphere, the decadence, the heat" of Macondo, named after a banana plantation on the outskirts of Aracataca.

<span id="midArticle_5"/>"This word had attracted my attention ever since the first trips I had made with my grandfather, but I discovered only as an adult that I liked its poetic resonance," he wrote in his memoirs, "Living to Tell the Tale."

<span id="midArticle_6"/>POLITICS, LITERARY FEUD

<span id="midArticle_7"/>Like many of his Latin American literary contemporaries, Garcia Marquez became increasingly involved in politics and flirted with communism.

<span id="midArticle_8"/>He spent time in post-revolution Cuba and developed a close friendship with communist leader Fidel Castro, to whom he sent drafts of his books.

<span id="midArticle_9"/>"A man of cosmic talent with the generosity of a child, a man for tomorrow," Castro once wrote of his friend. "His literature is authentic proof of his sensibility and the fact that he will never give up his origins, his Latin American inspiration and loyalty to the truth."

<span id="midArticle_10"/>The United States banned Garcia Marquez from visiting for a decade after he set up the New York branch of communist Cuba's official news agency and was accused of funding leftist guerrillas at home.

<span id="midArticle_11"/>He once condemned the U.S. war on drugs as "nothing more than an instrument of intervention in Latin America" but became friends with former U.S. President Bill Clinton.

<span id="midArticle_12"/>"He captured the pain and joy of our common humanity in settings both real and magical. I was honored to be his friend and to know his great heart and brilliant mind for more than 20 years," Clinton said on Thursday.

<span id="midArticle_13"/>Despite his reputation as a left-leaning intellectual, critics say Garcia Marquez didn't do as much as he could have done to help negotiate an end to Colombia's long conflict, which has killed tens of thousands of people.

<span id="midArticle_14"/>Instead, he left his homeland and went to live in Mexico. The damning criticism he leveled at his homeland still rings heavily in the ears of some Colombians.

<span id="midArticle_15"/>He was also a protagonist in one of literature's most talked-about feuds with fellow Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa of Peru.

<span id="midArticle_0"/>The writers, who were once friends, stopped speaking to each other after a day in 1976 when Vargas Llosa gave Garcia Marquez a black eye in a dispute - depending on who one believes - over politics or Vargas Llosa's wife.

<span id="midArticle_1"/>But Vargas Llosa paid tribute to Garcia Marquez on Thursday, calling him a "great writer" whose novels would live on.

<span id="midArticle_2"/>Politics and literary spats aside, Garcia Marquez's writing pace slowed down in the late 1990s.

<span id="midArticle_3"/>A heavy smoker for most of his life, he was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer in 1999, although the disease went into remission after chemotherapy treatment.

<span id="midArticle_4"/>None of his latest works achieved the success of his earlier novels.

<span id="midArticle_5"/>One of those, "Love in the Time of Cholera," told the story of a 50-year love affair inspired by his parents' courtship.

<span id="midArticle_6"/>It was made into a movie starring Spanish actor Javier Bardem in 2007, but many critics were disappointed and said capturing the sensuous romance of Garcia Marquez's novel had proved too tough a challenge.

<span id="midArticle_7"/>Garcia Marquez's most recent work of fiction, "Memories of My Melancholy Whores," got mixed reviews when it was released in 2004. The short novel is about a 90-year-old man's obsession with a 14-year-old virgin, a theme some readers found disturbing.

<span id="midArticle_8"/>Garcia Marquez is survived by Mercedes Barcha, his wife of more than 55 years, and by two sons, Rodrigo and Gonzalo.

<span id="midArticle_9"/>When he was working, Garcia Marquez would wake up before dawn every day, read a book, skim through the newspapers and then write for four hours. His wife would put a yellow rose on his desk.

<span id="midArticle_10"/>His last public appearance was on his 87th birthday when he came out from his Mexico City home to smile and wave at well-wishers, a yellow rose in the lapel of his gray suit.

<span id="midArticle_11"/>(Additional reporting by David Alire Garcia in Mexico City and Julia Symmes Cobb in Bogota; Editing by Kieran Murray and Ken Wills)

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