1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Garcia Marquez, Gabriel
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Garcia Marquez, Gabriel Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : HarperCollins Publishers 1999.
Language
English
Spanish
Main Author
Gabriel García Márquez, 1927-2014 (-)
Other Authors
Gregory Rabassa (-), J. S. Bernstein
Edition
1st Perennial Classics ed
Item Description
Previously published: New York : Harper & Row, c1984.
Physical Description
vi, 343 p. ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780060932688
  • Eyes of a blue dog: Third resignation
  • Other side of death
  • Eva is inside her cat
  • Bitterness for three sleepwalkers
  • Dialogue with the mirror
  • Eyes of a blue dog
  • Woman who came at six o'clock
  • Nabo, the black man who made the angels wait
  • Someone has been disarranging these roses
  • Night of the curlews
  • Monologue of Isabel watching it rain in Macondo
  • Big Mama's funeral: Tuesday siesta
  • One of these days
  • There are no thieves in this town
  • Balthazar's marvelous afternoon
  • Montiel's widow
  • One day after Saturday
  • Artificial roses
  • Big Mama's funeral
  • Incredible and sad tale of innocent Erendira and her heartless grandmother: Very old man with enormous wings
  • Sea of lost time
  • Handsomest drowned man in the world
  • Death constant beyond love
  • Last voyage of the ghost ship
  • Blacaman the Good, vendor of miracles
  • Incredible and sad tale of innocent Erendira and her heartless grandmother.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Twenty-six tales by the 1982 Nobel Prize Winner, rearranged in roughly chronological order of writing. From the 1968 collection No One Writes to the Colonel come stories of the town of Macondo--about the much-delayed funeral of local sovereign Big Mamma, a dentist's revenge on the corrupt Mayor (extraction sans anesthetic), a priest who sees the Devil, a thief who robs the pool hall of its billiard balls. But the collection's standout--its title novella--is not included here. Likewise, the long title piece from the Leaf Storm collection (1972)--also about a Colonel--is omitted; but it does offer ""The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World"" and other beguiling fantasies. And, from 1978's Innocent Erendira And Other Stories comes an uneven mix of mystical fable and diffuse surrealism (some pieces dating, before English translation, from the 1940s or '50s). Much that's brilliant, some that's merely strange and fragmentary, and almost all enhanced by the translations of Gregory Rabassa and S. J. Bernstein. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.