Gabriel García Márquez’s last novel is a moving testament to his genius
- Written by Gabriel Garcia Ochoa, Global Studies, Translation and Comparative Literature, Monash University
Gabriel García Márquez (1927-2014) – affectionately known as “Gabo” – started his career as a journalist, but is famous for the novels and short stories that earned him the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1982.
Alongside Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa and the Mexican Carlos Fuentes, he was the best-known member of the triumvirate that started the boom in Latin American literature in the late 1960s. He popularised the style that came to be known as “magical realism”, influencing later authors such as Isabel Allende and Salman Rushdie.
His novel One Hundred Years of Solitude has sold more than 30 million copies and has been translated into 37 languages. He is one of the most translated Spanish-language authors in the world, alongside Allende, Jorge Luis Borges, and the author of Don Quixote, Miguel de Cervantes.
Review: Until August – Gabriel Garcia Marquez, translated by Anne McLean (Viking)
News about Márquez’s unpublished novel has been making headlines for close to a year. Posthumously published novels can be contentious. They tend to come in four categories.
Some are unfinished or incomplete. These are either fragmentary works, like Vladimir Nabokov’s The Original of Laura, or substantial works that were never fully revised to the author’s satisfaction. Franz Kafka’s Amerika, The Trial and The Castle are famous examples of unfinished, posthumously published novels.
Some are unfinished but partially complete. In this case, we have sections that were fully revised by the author to their satisfaction, but not a full draft. Charles Dickens’ final novel The Mystery of Edwin Drood falls into this category. When Dickens died in 1870, he had finished and fully revised six out of twelve chapters.
Occasionally, posthumously published books are finished and complete. E.M. Forster wrote Maurice, his novel about homosexual love, in 1914. He revised it to his satisfaction, but then decided not to publish. He was afraid of legal repercussions due to the attitudes against homosexuality at the time. The novel was published in 1971, the year after his death.
Then there are novels that are finished but unrevised. A full draft exists, but one that we know required further revisions by the author. J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Silmarillion, for example, was written after The Hobbit, but was at first rejected. This resulted in Tolkien writing The Lord of the Rings trilogy. The Silmarillion was eventually revised, edited and published by Tolkien’s son, Christopher Tolkien, four years after his father’s death.