Love in the Time of Cholera

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Love in the Time of Cholera
First edition cover
Author [[Gabriel Garc�a M�rquez]]
Original title (if not in English) El amor en los tiempos del c�lera
Translator Edith Grossman
Country Colombia
Language Spanish
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Alfred A. Knopf
Released 1985 (Eng. trans. 1 January 1988)
Media Type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
ISBN ISBN 0-394-57108-8 (first edition, hardback)

Love in the Time of Cholera (El amor en los tiempos del c�lera, 1985) is a novel by [[Gabriel Garc�a M�rquez]] about a fifty-year love triangle between Fermina Daza, Florentino Ariza and Doctor Juvenal Urbino set in the late 19th century and the first decades of the 20th century (roughly 1880 to 1930). The novel, a picturesque tale of unrequited love, deeply explores the idea that suffering for love is a kind of nobility.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The novel begins as Dr. Urbino comes to examine the body of his close friend Jeremiah Saint-Amour. Jeremiah killed himself at the age of 60 in order to avoid growing old. Upon returning to his home, he finds his beloved pet parrot atop a mango tree. While trying to retrieve it, he falls to his death.

Florentino Ariza takes this moment to proclaim his love for Dr. Urbino's aged wife, Fermina Daza, but she is repulsed by his outburst and more than a little scared at the feelings she has engendered. When she was young, she and Florentino had written passionate love letters to each other and had even decided to get married. Upon seeing Florentino, however, Fermina is overcome with disgust for him and rejects him.

Florentino maintains an obsession for Fermina (see [[Pierre Ab�lard]]) and intends to stay a virgin until they are together, but soon finds himself using sex to mitigate the pain of their separation. Fermina marries Dr. Urbino and becomes a respectable wife to him. Dr. Urbino does likewise except for a brief affair.

Only after Dr. Urbino's death is Florentino able to revisit his love for Fermina. He is able to--with the power of his writing--slowly rekindle their relationship. On a river voyage together, the elderly couple finds themselves in love. Fermina fears the scandal this will bring so the Captain of the ship raises the yellow flag of cholera, dooming them to exile but also to be together forever.

[edit] Characters in "Love in the Time of Cholera"

[edit] Main Characters

  • Florentino Ariza
  • Fermina Daza
  • Dr. Juvenal Urbino

[edit] Other Characters

  • Lorenzo Daza
  • Jeremiah de Saint-Amour
  • Aunt Escolastica
  • Transito Ariza
  • Lotario Thugut
  • Hildebranda Sanchez
  • Miss Lynch
  • The Captain

[edit] Major themes

[edit] Love as an Emotional and Physical Disease

Garcia's main notion is that lovesickness is a literal illness, a disease comparable to cholera. Florentino Ariza suffers from this just as he might suffer from any malady. At one point, Florentino conflates his physical agony with his amorous agony when he vomits after eating flowers in order to imbibe Fermina's scent. In the final chapter, the Captain's declaration of metaphorical plague is another manifestation of this. The term cholera as it is used in the Spanish, [[C�lera]], can also denote human rage and ire. It is this second meaning to the title that manifests itself both on the level of Florentino Ariza's hatred for Doctor Juvenal Urbino as well as the theme of social strife and warfare that serves as a backdrop to the entire story. [[Gabriel Garc�a M�rquez]] thus extends the theme of love as a disease in the socio-political context.

[edit] Aging and Death

Jeremiah Saint-Amour's death inspires Dr. Urbino to meditate on his own death, especially the infirmities that accompany it. It is necessary for Fermina and Florentino to transcend not only the difficulties of love, but also the societal view that love is a young person's prerogative.

[edit] Suffering for Love

Florentino's penchant for the high drama as a poet and a lover is portrayed as both ridiculous and serious. He may go to outlandish lengths for love but in the end the absurdity is enobling and his suffering has a kind of dignity. He also endures physical pains.

[edit] Allusions/references from other works

This novel is the one that Jonathon (John Cusack's character), in the film Serendipity (film), must find in order to retrieve Sara's (Kate Beckinsale) phone number.

In the movie High Fidelity, Rob Gordon (also played by John Cusack) makes reference to this book along with The Unbearable Lightness of Being, saying that he's not the smartest guy in the world, but that he's not the dumbest either, having read these books and thinking he's understood them. "They're about girls, right?" he quips.

Steve Martin, in his rather humorous essay "Writing is Easy," talks about why Love in the Time of Cholera does not make a very good title. It's all tongue-in-cheek of course. The essay can be found in his book Pure Drivel.

In the 21st episode of the sitcom How I Met Your Mother, lead character Ted Mosby (Josh Radnor) describes his ideal wife as having Love in the Time of Cholera as her favorite book.

Pittsburgh singer-songwriter Heather Kropf based a song on the novel that appeared on her 2000 album "Sky".

[edit] Movie Adaptation

Currently New Line Cinema holds the rights to produce a film version of the book and Mike Newell has been chosen to direct it. Gabriel Garcia Marquez has signed on to write a faithful screen adaptation. Filming has started in Cartegena, Colombia, as of September 2006.

[edit] Release details

  • 1985, ?, Spanish edition ?, Pub date ? ? 1985, hardback (first edition)
  • 1988, USA, Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0-394-57108-8, Pub date 1 January 1988, hardback (Eng trans. first edition)
  • 1989, USA, Penguin Books ISBN 0-14-011990-6, Pub date 7 September 1989, paperback

{{Gabriel Garc�a M�rquez}}

[edit] Links

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