Publication 574
By orwell on
Thursday, December 18, 2003
at
22:12
Location:
Ireland
Registered:
Thursday, August 14, 2003
Posts:
18
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Has anyone read this mad, wonderful,delirious tale by Gabriel Garcia Marquez about the history of the Buendias family, their house and the peculiar occurences in the town they created called Macondo located somewhere in Latin America. I don't think I have ever read a book in which fatalism and hope are so curiously intertwined between farce and tragedy, without a single trace of self-indulgent sentimentalism to be encountered in the characters who inhabit the real and imaginary realms that are constantly shimmering between the intense tropical heat visible in this book, of such marvellous oddness. Could this type of magnificent, quixotical maddness, evolve from our own sophisticated first world cultures? No room for the real "fools" of the world anymore? Then read Marquez, there is a wisdom and humour in the harshness and sacrifice of these characters. Any fellow readers, any thoughts?
Publication 586
By J.R.Smith on
Wednesday, January 28, 2004
at
12:58
Location:
Germany
Registered:
Wednesday, January 28, 2004
Posts:
1
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Hi there. I've recently read the book, and also think it's great. Just wanted to post a note to reccomend another one, Salman Rusidie's Midnight's Children. It's very similar to Solitude. In my opinion, maybe even better. But that's just opinion.
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