Category Archives: LITERATURE

LITERATURE: 100 Years – Maybe the Worst Solitude of All…

Fernanda, widowed by Aureliano Segundo, her children in a convent, a seminary, a school, alone now with Aureliano, the illegitimate son of her elder daughter, retreats back within herself when she finds no one to to immediately work for, no … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Years – The Flood

The rain of four years, eleven months and two days has devastated Macondo.  Ursula has survived it, and the sun has revived her–as it does me–as a shot of adrenalin that sends her around the house repairing damage and desolation.  … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: otto #2

Laidback laundry, lawn and layout day.  The Narratives Writers Group’s publication is  just about ready to go to print, awaiting some final inserts and editing.  This issue is honored with the inclusion of two of our blogworld’s finest writers, and … Continue reading

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LITERATURE & WRITING: 100 Years – Using the Tools

It is a pleasure for a learning writer to recognize some of the skills practiced to perfection within the pages of a novel.  One of my own writing flaws, that of the run-on sentence, has been played with and twisted … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: In Action

This evening I had the pleasure of viewing the work of two friends in short film and flash fiction formats.  Both of these pieces had started out in short story form, but both writers looked beyond the text to enter … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: Marquez’s Magic

Finally, someone else writing about Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and with the bonus of touching upon the magical realism aspect just as I am as well.  Read Daniel Green’s (The Reading Experience) "Necessitating Judgment" and his reference to Adam Kirsch’s review … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Years – The Rain

"It rained for four years, eleven months, and two days."  (p. three-thirty-nine) And so there is a plague of sorts upon the village of Macondo.  And everyone awaits the "clearing."  Aureliano Segundo moves out of his mistress, Petra Cotes’ home … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Years – Magical Realism Continued

As a young boy, Aureliano Segundo asks Ursula to see the locked room where Melquiades had stayed and had written tomes of undecipherable (to most) words: "He demanded so much, promised with such insistence that he would not mistreat the … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Years – Magical Realism

Marquez is a master of weaving fantasy into a novel of realism to hold the reader’s interest, allow him to accept or interpret, yet at the same time, doubt the credibility of our narrator.  Is he speaking metaphorically?  Is he … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Years – Heavy Metaphor

Haven’t read too much further, as the Buendias are about to enter a new era, but have been concentrating on the somewhat magical room of Melquiades that seems to be viewed in two different ways, and by Jose Arcadio Segundo’s … Continue reading Continue reading

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LTIERATURE: More on the Top 100

In going over the list of TIME’s best 100 novels written since 1923, I’m surprised to find that I have never read Vonnegut, Woolf, or Kerourac, Rushdie or Updike.  There are those authors on the list that I’ve read in … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Years – The Solitude of Jose Arcadio Segundo

Very very strange stuff happening.  The banana company workers go on strike, led in force by Jose Arcadio Segundo, and the military is called into the town.  After several attempts at compromise, a meeting is called for the workers to … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Best Novels

The TIME Mag critics present a list of their selection of 100 best novels written from 1923 to the present.  Via Miss Snark, the Literary Agent. I can’t believe 100 Years of Solitude isn’t included.  Happy to see that I’ve … Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Years – Religion and the Past

With Meme’s lover, Mauricio Babilonia, shot in the spine beneath her window, Marquez foreshadows the child that comes of the slippery nights before that tragic evening, and of course, we expect her mother’s aghast reaction to her suspicions.  Fernanda bundles … Continue reading Continue reading

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LITERATURE: 100 Years – Character Analysis

Maybe this almost daily posting on 100 Years of Solitude isn’t such a good idea.  I seem to draw conclusions from a reading, or am struck by something, then further on I’m finding that Marquez indeed does tell me clearly … Continue reading Continue reading

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