Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez, Edith Grossman (Translator)

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(Paperback - Reissue)

Reader Rating: (91 ratings)

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Synopsis

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."

Mary Wesley on Garcia Marquez's Love in the Time of Cholera:

"This is the funniest, most moving book I have read and re-read. Each reading discovers fresh delights, a true classic. Garcia Marquez is the greatest South American writer who doesn't hesitate to write of the spiritual and mundane in the same paragraph."

Annotation

The lush, wondrous story of an unrequited love that survives half a century.

Anne Tyler

One of this century's most evocative writers. —Chicago Sun-Times

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Biography

A chief practitioner of the "magic-realist" style, Gabriel García Márquez's influence and importance lie in his crucial role of bringing Latin-American fiction to wider audiences while pioneering it at the same time. The Colombian-born Nobel winner tells fantastical tales of romance and heroism against an historic Latin American backdrop, always infusing believability by giving his writing a journalistic cast.

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Customer Reviews

Nobel Prize for Literatureby L.Emerson

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October 31, 2008: This is the most gorgeous book I've ever read, not just for the plot, which is interesting, but because it is written with the highest level of storytelling skill. I thoroughly loved it. Readers looking for more than just a good book will be well satisfied. The most discriminating critics, wanting to give their time over only to a true work of modern literature, will find it here.

It was originally written in Spanish, and was probably a wonderfully crafted piece of literature in the author's native language. After all, it did win the Nobel Prize. But I believe a tremendous amount of credit for the lushness of this work in this, its English version, belongs to the unsung translator who did an absolutely stunning job. Like most of us, I've read translations of other works that seemed a bit clunky or repetitive. But this one was masterful, every page containing new descriptions that leapt off the page with bright clarity and clever originality.

The Mexican, Caribbean and South American locations described in the book came to life in vivid detail. Yet for all its exotic richness and scope, the story is still very accessible, the emotions universal, relatable. Characters are developed, a wide gamut of tempers and passions flair all over the place, scenes build across the pages with crescendo. It is even funny at times. I doubt the movie came close to this depth of storytelling. If you saw the film and didn't care for it, don't hold it against the book.

A reviewerby Anonymous

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April 23, 2008: I fail to see the beauty in this novel. Maybe my literary expertise is a bit under-developed, but I don't think so. I'm aware that the book is a work of Magical Realism, I'm clear on that. However, when I read, I want to get lost in the world of which I am reading. This book left me stranded in the middle of no where. The premise of a man so devoted to the short memory of a woman, whom he barely knew, and then proceeded to stalk, for years and years, only to show up at probably the most tasteless place to declare his love....? I don't get it. Some of the events were disturbing, to say the least...but hey, those of you who count this novel as a work of genius may have insight into the literary mind that I may not. I do in fact believe that this one of those novels that people rant and rave over simply to sound more intellectual and 'well-read.' Having read three of his other novels, I guess that would make me just as 'well-read.' Of course this is my opinion, only. The movie was just as painful...I made it about 20 minutes in...


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