Colombia's brilliant successors to García MárquezA long-awaited authorised biography of Gabriel García Márquez, A Life by Gerald Martin, is out next week. Yet, more than a quarter-century after his Nobel prize, ensuing generations of Colombian writers This is a list of Colombian literary figures, including poets, novelists, children's writers, essayists, and scholars.
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of .The turmoil of war and drug-trafficking, displacement and emigration emigration: see immigration; migration. , has remapped See remap. the country since Gabo's heyday. Evelio Rosero is among writers taking part this weekend in a Colombian cross-arts festival, Colombiage, at London's Riverside Studios. His haunting novel The Armies (2007), published by MacLehose press on November 6 in a translation by Anne McLean, is about the war still being fought in the countryside, despite the record of President Álvaro Uribe in making cities safer. It was based on news bulletins and tales from some of the country's 3.8 million "desplazados". In a high-rise Bogotá hotel, Rosero told me he was spurred on by the rise of paramilitaries and private armies, and "the unarmed being gunned down by the armed". His elderly protagonist is the "memory of a time that's vanished - the shock of an older person horrified hor·ri·fy tr.v. hor·ri·fied, hor·ri·fy·ing, hor·ri·fies 1. To cause to feel horror. See Synonyms at dismay. 2. To cause unpleasant surprise to; shock. by the world a new generation is creating."That new world is another reason to pay heed Verb 1. pay heed - give heed (to); "The children in the audience attended the recital quietly"; "She hung on his every word"; "They attended to everything he said" advert, give ear, attend, hang to these writers.Reflecting on decades of conflict and extremity can lead to profound truths. Juan Carlos Botero is the son of South America's most famous artist, Fernando Botero. His mother was kidnapped (then freed) in 1973, and since 2000 he has lived in Miami, where we met. One of his interests is the imperceptible step into bloodshed: "It's very easy for the line to be crossed - it begins casually. Then it's too late." In a short story, two teenagers stumble on a police torture chamber, growing fascinated, then bored. Botero says, "if you're bombarded with violence, you become numb to it, and finally a participant. People try to solve domestic issues that way. It becomes a culture. Yet as a writer, you have to add something more than the anecdote - a deeper truth."That culture is also questioned by Mario Mendoza, whose psychological thriller Psychological thriller is a specific sub-genre of the wide-ranging thriller genre. However, this genre often incorporates elements from the mystery genre in addition to the typical traits of the thriller genre. novel Satanás (2002) became a hit film last year. It was based on the Pozzetto massacre of 1986 in Bogotá, when a Vietnam veteran This article is about veterans of the Vietnam War. For the French psychedelic musical group, see Vietnam Veterans. Vietnam veteran is a phrase used to describe someone who served in the armed forces of participating countries during the Vietnam War. murdered 29 people, mostly strangers, before committing suicide. For Mendoza, whom I met in a bar in La Candelaria, the novel was an exorcism exorcism (ĕk`sôrsĭz'əm), ritual act of driving out evil demons or spirits from places, persons, or things in which they are thought to dwell. It occurs both in primitive societies and in the religions of sophisticated cultures. . As a friend of the killer (a fellow student whose thesis was on Jekyll and Hyde Jekyll and Hyde 1. A slang term referring to the strengths and weaknesses of a company's financial statements. 2. An asset that suddenly increases or decreases in value. 3. ), he was beset by guilt at the thought that he might have averted the massacre. Driven to writing urban, apocalyptic fiction about the "dark side of Bogota", Mendoza sees political violence as reflecting "domestic violence, joblessness, what happens in streets, buses, in your house". Not all these writers are yet translated. But that, as we paydue homage to Gabo, is all the more reason to lend them an ear.
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