“Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano BuendÃa was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.†Thus begins Nobel Prize winner Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude, one of the twentieth century’s most lauded works of fiction. In Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez, literary scholar Stephen M. Hart provides a succinct yet thorough look into GarcÃa Márquez’s life and the political struggles of Latin America that have influenced his work, from Love in the Time of Cholera to Memories of My Melancholy Whores.
           By interviewing GarcÃa Márquez’s family in Cuba, Hart was able to gain a unique perspective on his use of “creative false memory,†providing new insight into the magical realism that dominates GarcÃa Márquez’s oeuvre. Using these interviews and his original research, Hart defines five ingredients that are critical to GarcÃa Márquez’s work: magical realism, a shortened and broken portrayal of time, punchy one-liners, dark and absurd humor, and political allegory. These elements, as described by Hart, illuminate the extraordinary allure of GarcÃa Márquez’s work and provide fascinating insight into his approach to writing. Hart also explores the divisions between GarcÃa Márquez’s everyday life and his life as a writer, and the connection in his work between family history and national history.
Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez presents an original portrait of this well-renowned writer and is a must-read for fans of his work as well as those interested in magical realism, Latin American fiction, and modern literature.