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| Record 241 of 258 |
| | Author | | Falcoff, Mark
| | | Title | | "Typing for Castro," National Review
| | | Publisher | | National Review | | | Publication place | | New York, NY | | | Publication year | | May 1, 2000 | | | Page | | 18-19 | | | Volume | | 52 | | | Issue | | 8 | | | Notes | | "The article criticizes Colombian novelist Gabriel García Márquez for supporting Cuba in the custody and immigration battle between the U.S. and the Cuban government over Cuban refugee Elián González. It describes the relationship between García Márquez and Cuban leader Fidel Castro and offers information about how García Márquez depicted the issue in the op-ed page of 'The New York Times.’ It argues against García Márquez's claim that the boy should be saved from growing up in the U.S." | | | URL | | | |
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| Record 242 of 258 |
| | Author | | Mora, Rosa
| | | Title | | "Un jurado de lujo premia los ensayos literarios de Mario Vargas Llosa. La verdad de las mentiras recibe el Bartolomé March al mejor libro de crítica de 2002," El País
| | | Publisher | | El País | | | Publication place | | Madrid, Spain | | | Publication year | | September, 2002 | | | Page | | | | | Volume | | | | | Issue | | | | | Notes | | A jury integrated by Eduardo Mendoza, Félix de Azúa, Guillermo Cabrera Infante, Luis Goytisolo, Jorge Volpi, and Fernando Savater among other authors and experts, gave out the Second Bartolomé March Prize to the best book of literary criticism of the year, La verdad de las mentiras, by Mario Vargas Llosa. ||Another book by Vargas Llosa that is very important in literary criticism is Gabriel García Márquez: Historia de un deicidio (1971). When asked if he would allow for a reedition of this book, Vargas Llosa responded "Maybe in the future. Why not? The problem is that I need to revise and rewrite almost the whole thing, just like I did with La verdad de las mentiras. Since I wrote it, García Márquez has published other important works." | | | URL | | http://elpais.es | |
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| Record 243 of 258 |
| | Author | | Mendoza, Mario
| | | Title | | "Un viaje corporal", Kipus: Revista Andina de Letras
| | | Publisher | | Corporacion Editora Nacional | | | Publication place | | Ecuador | | | Publication year | | 2002/2003 | | | Page | | | | | Volume | | | | | Issue | | | | | Notes | | Brief mention of García Márquez. Mendoza states: "Cuando leemos a Borges, a García Márquez o a Rulfo, inmediatamente cambiamos nuestra manera de ver, de pensar y de ser. Eso nos sucede también con Picasso o con Fernando Botero. Sus ojos nos muestran un mundo que no habíamos visto antes, nos abren nuevas posibilidades." | | | URL | | | |
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| Record 244 of 258 |
| | Author | | Gómez Córdoba, Gustavo
| | | Title | | "Una (o dos, o tres) cosas sobre Shakira," El Malpensante
| | | Publisher | | El Malpensante | | | Publication place | | Bogotá, Colombia | | | Publication year | | February-March, 2002 | | | Page | | 92-94 | | | Volume | | | | | Issue | | 36 | | | Notes | | Brief mention of García Márquez relative to his friendship with fellow Colombian singer, Shakira. | | | URL | | | |
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| Record 245 of 258 |
| | Author | | Setién, Loreto and Lucía Argos
| | | Title | | "Una comunidad bajo sospecha. La exigencia de visado reaviva la lucha de los inmigrantes de Colombia en España por romper el molde que les asocia a la violencia y narcotráfico," El País
| | | Publisher | | El País | | | Publication place | | Madrid, Spain | | | Publication year | | March, 2001 | | | Page | | | | | Volume | | | | | Issue | | | | | Notes | | There are 24,650 Colombians without a permit for residence living in Spain; without papers, the number triplicates. The eminent demand to have a visa to enter Spain makes the wound deeper. Seven world renown Colombian authors are at the front of acting against the law that requires every Colombian to have a visa to enter Spain. García Márquez says that asking for a visa when entering Spain would be like asking for a visa to enter their own mother's house. | | | URL | | http://elpais.es | |
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| Record 246 of 258 |
| | Author | | Webster, Justin
| | | Title | | "Una entrevista con Ian Jack," El Malpensante
| | | Publisher | | El Malpensante | | | Publication place | | Bogotá, Colombia | | | Publication year | | February-March, 2002 | | | Page | | 62-69 | | | Volume | | | | | Issue | | 36 | | | Notes | | Translated into Spanish by Juan Gabriel Vásquez. In his interview, Ian Jack mentions some of the names that have been published in the magazine, Granta, of which he is the editor. Some of these renown authors include: Martin Amis, Julian Barnes, Saul Bellow, Peter Carey, Raymond Carver, Bruce Chatwin, Richard Ford, Nadine Gordimer, Milan Kundera, Doris Lessing, Salman Rushdie, George Steiner, Graham Swift, Norman Lewis, Ian McEwan, Paul Theroux, Jeanette Winterson, Tobias Wolff, and Gabriel García Márquez. | | | URL | | | |
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| Record 247 of 258 |
| | Author | | Martínez Palau, Silvio
| | | Title | | "Veinticinco cuentos barranquilleros," La Casa de Asterión
| | | Publisher | | Universidad del Atlántico | | | Publication place | | Barranquilla, Colombia | | | Publication year | | | | | Page | | | | | Volume | | 1 | | | Issue | | 4 | | | Notes | | Viewed on 24 January, 2008.||Only in the last decades of the past century have Europe and the United States begun to notice Latin American literature, by reading it through the works of Borges and García Márquez. In literature only with García Márquez, the US and Europe noticed that in Latin America there was something to read, even to imitate. Almost all of the tales in "Veinticinco cuentos Barranquilleros" unites the city of Barranquilla and its surroundings. They are not stories of authors from Barranquilla, but stories of authors who reside there, or at one point resided there. However García Márquez is not included among them. Maybe it is because he never wrote a story with Barranquilla as the background. | | | URL | | http://lacasadeasterion.homestead.com/v1n3silvio~ns4.html | |
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| Record 248 of 258 |
| | Author | | Tobón Escobar, Santiago
| | | Title | | "Viejas historias personales," Boletín Cultural y Bibliográfico
| | | Publisher | | Banco de la República | | | Publication place | | Bogotá, Colombia | | | Publication year | | 2004 | | | Page | | 126-127 | | | Volume | | 40 | | | Issue | | 62 | | | Notes | | Tobón Escobar begins by talking about the chronicle and then proceeds to say that Gabriel García Márquez, among other Colombian authors, has given examples of skillfully mastering this genre through journalistic experience in other mediums. | | | URL | | | |
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| Record 249 of 258 |
| | Author | | Hernández, Álvaro
| | | Title | | "Vivir para contarla, autobiografía de Gabriel García Márquez," El Informador de Champaign-Urbana
| | | Publisher | | | | | Publication place | | Champaign-Urbana, IL | | | Publication year | | November, 2002 | | | Page | | 15 | | | Volume | | 0 | | | Issue | | 9 | | | Notes | | Vivir para contarla, or Living to Tell the Tale, is the first of three volumes of Gabriel García Márquez's autobiography and memoirs. More than a million copies have been published in Latin America and Spain, and at the end of the year it will be published in English, German, and Italian. This article provides basic information of Vivir para contarla and gives background information about Gabriel García Márquez. | | | URL | | | |
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| Record 250 of 258 |
| | Author | | Otamendi, Araceli
| | | Title | | "Vivir para contarla, Gabriel García Márquez," Quaderns Digitals
| | | Publisher | | Quaderns Digitals | | | Publication place | | Valencia, Spain | | | Publication year | | 2003 | | | Page | | | | | Volume | | | | | Issue | | | | | Notes | | This article mentions details of Gabriel García Márquez's memoirs, beginning with the initial scene of García Márquez going to Aracataca with his mother to sell the house of his grandparents where he was born. Memoirs and autobiographies have this common zone in the memory which allows us to forget, rewrite, and invent. In the case of García Márquez, the richness of his life has been reflected in the worlds he creates in his novels. It's the gaze of the Colombian writer toward his life, toward the people related to him, that appears in his autobiography and delights the reader with how his stories and novels occur. He also does self-analysis in his book. | | | URL | | http://www.quadernsdigitals.net/index.php?accionMenubuscador.VisualizaResultadoBuscadorIU.visualiza&seccion9&articuloSeccion_id260 | |
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