Authors on the Rise Book Reviews

love in the time of cholera by gabriel garcia marquez

Love in the Time of Cholera

By  Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Reviewed by Leigh O'Donovan

Rating: 5 Stars

LOVE IN THE TIME OF CHOLERA BY GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ

GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ'S - LOVE IN THE TIME OF CHOLERA
 

love in the time of cholera by gabriel garcia marquez

Set in an unnamed Caribbean seaport, Garcia Marquez's extraordinary Love in the Time of Cholera (1988) relates one of literature's most remarkable stories of unrequited love. "This shining and heartbreaking novel," Thomas Pynchon wrote in The New York Times Book Review, is one of those few rare works "that can even return our worn souls to us."


BOOK REVIEW FOR LOVE IN THE TIME OF CHOLERA BY GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ -
BY LEIGH O'DONOVAN

At the age of 20, a solemn Florentino Ariza proclaimed his everlasting love to his sweetheart, Fermina Daza.  But, in a moment of pity, Fermina cast away Florentino’s love and married a wealthy doctor.  Half a century, 622 affairs and the death of a doctor later, Florentino will once again proclaim his unrequited love for Fermina.  His entire life he has prepared for this moment.  Will Fermina return the affection that Florentino so desperately needs?  Or will she refuse him again as she had done as a 16-year-old girl?

            Nobel Prize winner Gabriel Garcia Marquez beautifully narrates the tale of love that has sustained 50 years of turmoil.  His use of rich language paints a picture of the Caribbean at the turn of the century.  Marquez uses this backdrop expertly to weave the lives of the lovers throughout the pages and years of their lives.  This book gives hope to those who believe that true love can overcome all, including death, disease, wealth and social class.  A wonderfully written novel by one of the leading Latin American authors- 5 STARS

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More Info On Gabriel Garcia Marquez

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Believed by many to be one of the world’s greatest writers, Gabriel García Márquez is a Colombian-born author and journalist, winner of the 1982 Nobel Prize for Literature and a pioneer of the Latin American “Boom.” Affectionately known as “Gabo” to millions of readers, he first won international fame with his masterpiece, One Hundred Years of Solitude, a defining classic of twentieth century literature.

Whether writing short stories, epic novels, or nonfiction, Gabo is above all a brilliant storyteller, and his writing is a tribute to both the power of the imagination and the mysteries of the human heart. In Gabo’s world, where flowers rain from the sky and dictators sell the very ocean, reality is subject to emotional truths as well as physical boundaries. It is a world of great beauty and great cruelty; a world where love brings both redemption and enslavement; and a world where the lines between objective reality and dreams are hopelessly blurred. It is a world very much like our own.