Gabriel Garcia Marquez was born in 1927 near Aracataca, Colombia. He is the author of One Hundred Years of Solitude, Love in the Time of Cholera, and Living to Tell the Tale, among other works of fiction and non-fiction. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1982. He lives in Mexico City.
"""A rich, commodious novel whose narrative power is matched only by its generosity of vision."" --""The New York Times"" ""A love story of astonishing power and delicious comedy . . . humane, richly comic, almost unbearably touching and altogether extraordinary."" --""Newsweek"" ""The greatest luxury, as in all of Garcia Marquez's books, is the eerie, entirely convincing suspension of the laws of reality . . . the agelessness of the human story as told by one of this century's most evocative writers."" --Anne Tyler, ""Chicago Sun-Times Book Week"" ""Revolutionary in daring to suggest that vows of love made under a presumption of immortality--youthful idiocy, to some--may yet be honored, much later in life when we ought to know better, in the face of the undeniable. . . . A shining and heartbreaking book."" --Thomas Pynchon, ""The New York Times Book Review "" ""This shining and heartbreaking novel may be one of the greatest love stories ever told."" --""The New York Times Book Review """"A love story of astonishing power.... Altogether extraordinary."" --""Newsweek "" ""Brilliant, provocative...magical...splendid writing."" --""Chicago Tribune "" ""Beguiling, masterly storytelling.... Garcia Marquez writes about love as saving grace, the force that makes life worthwhile."" --""Newsday "" ""A sumptuous book...[with] major themes of love, death, the torments of memory, the inexorability of old age."" --""The Washington Post Book World"""