Gabriel Garcia Marquez: The supreme storyteller, he changed his country’s reality

Appreciation

Boyd Tonkin
Friday 18 April 2014 03:55 EDT
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A couple of years ago, the Colombian ambassador in London convened a celebratory lunch in honour of Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Gabo, as he was known, could not have been there.

His memory had started to fade some years before. Time was, at long last, catching up with a resilient survivor who had already grappled with cancer. Yet it was still an extrordinary occasion: a noble tribute to an author from a nation whose global role he had not merely embellished but helped to redefine.

From the era of “La Violencia” in the late 1940s, Colombia has weathered more than its fair share of hideous bloodshed, factional strife and chronic instability. But there, on the other side of the balance, stood Gabo: perhaps the best-loved novelist of the entire postwar period.

The author of One Hundred Years of Solitude, Love in the Time of Cholera and other masterworks from The Autumn of the Patriarch to The General in his Labyrinth, he put his stamp on his country and on a worldwide republic of letters.

And the former journalist did so with a charismatic allure unmatched since the heyday of Hugo and Tolstoy in the late 19th-century. This supreme storyteller managed, via the magic of his art, to alter the shape of his country’s and his continent’s reality.

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