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The publishing event of 2024: an unpublished novel by Gabriel García Márquez will be published

2023-04-28T20:01:42.139Z


It is called 'In August we see' and it will be published next year for the ten years since his death. "He has the best of him," they say.


An unpublished novel by

Gabriel García Márquez

,

See you in August

, will appear published

in 2024, the 10th anniversary of the death

of the Colombian Nobel Prize winner, the Random House publishing house announced this Friday.

The new work by the author of

One Hundred Years of Solitude

 or

Love in the Times of Cholera

 will appear "in 2024 in all Spanish-speaking countries, except Mexico" and "it will undoubtedly be

the most important publishing event next

year," he reported. the publisher in a statement.

"

See you in August

 was the result of a last effort to continue creating against all odds," the writer's sons, Rodrigo and Gonzalo García Barcha, explained in the statement.

"Reading it once again almost ten years after his death, we discovered that the text had many and very enjoyable merits," added the children of the writer who died in Mexico on April 17, 2014, at the age of 87.

According to them,

the novel contains "the most outstanding of Gabo's work:

his capacity for invention, the poetry of language, the captivating narrative, his understanding of the human being and his affection for his experiences and misadventures, especially in love. , possibly the main theme of all his work".

Rodrigo Garcia and his father, Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

/ Rogelio Cuellar

Life and work

Born on March 6, 1927 in the town of Aracataca, in the Caribbean area of ​​Colombia, García Márquez, journalist and writer, left behind an extensive list of short stories and novels, such as Relato de un náufrago, Crónica de una

muerte

annunciada

,

El

colonel no one writes to him

,

News of a kidnapping

, and the most popular of all,

One Hundred Years of Solitude

.

This work earned him, in 1972, the Rómulo Gallegos Latin American novel prize, his first great distinction, which would be followed, in 1982, by the Nobel Prize for Literature.

Together with the Peruvian Mario Vargas Llosa, the Argentine Julio Cortázar or the Mexican Carlos Fuentes, he was part of what became known as "the Latin American boom", an editorial and literary phenomenon of the 1960s and 1970s that made them known throughout the world.

García Márquez is the most translated Spanish-language writer in the 21st century

, more than Miguel de Cervantes, the Cervantes Institute revealed in April.

AFP

pc

look also

Nothing retires: at 99, Ida Vitale will read poetry at the Book Fair

The year of Roberto Bolaño: tributes to 20 years of his death and 70 of his birth

Source: clarin

All news articles on 2023-04-28

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