Author suggests JK Rowling stop writing adult fiction

Author suggests JK Rowling stop writing adult fiction

24 February 2024

Author suggests JK Rowling stop writing adult fiction

By Anthony ZurcherEditor, Echo Chambersخليجية
Are JK Rowling’s books taking ****f space away from younger, more talented authors?

By writing the adult fiction novel The Casual Vacancy, JK Rowling "sucked the oxygen from the entire publishing and reading atmosphere", making it harder for aspiring authors to flourish.

At least, that’s what Lynn Shepherd, an Author of "literary mysteries" set in 19th Century England, thinks. On Friday she penned a piece for the Huffington Post in which she contended that the Author of the Harry Potter saga has "had her turn" and should stick with children’s books (which she admits she hasn’t read).

"Rowling has no need of either the ****f space or the column inches, but other writers desperately do," she writes.

She concludes by telling Ms Rowling:
Enjoy your vast fortune and the good you’re doing with it, luxuriate in the love of your legions of fans, and good luck to you on both counts. But it’s time to give other writers, and other writing, room to breathe.

So what happens when you take dead aim at one of the most popular authors of modern times? Nothing good, that’s for certain.

"What Ms. Shepherd appears to be suggesting is that Rowling should be happy with the success she’s earned, and should stop, because apparently, there is no more reason for Rowling to continue writing in the adult market," writes Author Nathan Scalia for Lit Reactor.

It’s a "ridiculous" argument, he says. "If my book doesn’t succeed, it’s because it didn’t resonate with fans the same way that Harry Potter did. There’s room enough on the book****f for both."

Shepherd misunderstands literary economics, says Author Larry Correia.

"JK Rowling making a dollar does not take a dollar out of your pocket," he writes. "That is loser talk. Quite the contrary, she has grown our market, and brought more readers into genre fiction, so she’s actually put dollars IN your pocket. "

Steven Salvatore Shaw writes for the blog beautifulCHAOS that Shepherd is belittling young adult (YA) novels.
"There is so much more room for creativity with **** in the YA genre than in adult fiction (not that I’m knocking adult fiction by any stretch), but it’s obvious that Shepherd hasn’t bothered to understand the genre that she’s trying – and failing miserably – to critique," he writes.

But why stop at criticising Shepherd? Amanda Green on the blog According to Hoyt contends that the Author reflects the entitled attitude of an entire generation.

"They haven’t been taught what it means to have to face consequences for their actions or inactions," she writes. "Our schools don’t help. How can they when more and more of them are doing away with pesky little things like homework or take a test one time and learn to live with your score?"

Romance Author Tymber Dalton writes that Shepherd’s piece is a shining example for new authors of what not to say in public.

"I can’t think of a faster way to totally tank your career than to piss off a WORLD of readers by looking like a jealous, petty, wannabe hack," she writes.

In case there was any doubt about that point, visit Shepherd’s Author page on the online bookseller Amazon.com, where her books are getting blasted with one-star reviews from outraged Harry Potter fans.
"I didn’t read this book but, if the author’s HuffPo article taught me one thing, it’s that I don’t have to read a book in order to judge it," reads on typical post. "So here’s a one-star review. Not because I believe in trolling, but because Lynn does. You want to pan other writers work without reading it first, then enjoy the world you built."

At the beginning of her piece, Shepherd concedes that a friend told her not to write it, as "everyone will just put it down to sour grapes".

If she’s a really good friend, she’s not saying "I told you so" right now.

Update: As reader SoIndianaGuy points out in the comments, best-selling Author Anne Rice (of Interview With a Vampire fame) has also weighed in on the topic. On her Facebook page, she calls Shepherd’s piece a "vicious, cynical, resentful and thoroughly ugly article".

She continues:
Never have I seen anything this malicious ever directed towards an actor, a painter, a ballet dancer, an opera singer, a film director. No, this is the kind of petty, spiteful condescending criticism that is for some reason reserved for writers in our world. And that it was written by some one who is a writer herself makes it doubly nasty and shocking…
In my life as a novelist, I’ve come to believe we are only in competition with ourselves when we strive to do our best; there is plenty of room for a multitude of successful endeavors in the ever changing world of books and readers, and there always will be.

It all goes to show that you should be very careful picking fights with people whose book sales are counted by the million.
Source: BBC News – Author suggests JK Rowling stop writing adult fiction

And the article in question…..

Lynn Shepherd

Novelist and copywriter

If JK Rowling Cares About Writing, She Should stop Doing It

Posted: 21/02/2014

When I told a friend the title of this piece she looked at me in horror and said, "You can’t say that, everyone will just put it down to sour grapes!" And she does, of course, have a point. No struggling but relatively ambitious writer can possibly be anything other than envious. You’d be scarcely human otherwise. But this particular piece isn’t about that.

I didn’t much mind Rowling when she was Pottering about. I’ve never read a word (or seen a minute) so I can’t comment on whether the books were good, bad or indifferent. I did think it a shame that adults were reading them (rather than just reading them to their children, which is another thing altogether), mainly because there’s so many other books out there that are surely more stimulating for grown-up minds. But, then again, any reading is better than no reading, right? But The Casual Vacancy changed all that.

It wasn’t just that the hype was drearily excessive, or that (by all accounts) the novel was no masterpiece and yet sold by the hundredweight, it was the way it crowded out everything else, however good, however worthwhile. That book sucked the oxygen from the entire publishing and reading atmosphere. And I chose that analogy quite deliberately, because I think that sort of monopoly can make it next to impossible for anything else to survive, let alone thrive. Publishing a book is hard enough at the best of times, especially in an industry already far too fixated with Big ****s and Sure Things, but what can an ordinary Author do, up against such a
Golgomath?

And then there was the whole Cuckoo’s Calling saga. I know she used a pseudonym, and no doubt strenuous efforts were indeed made to conceal her identity, but there is no spell strong enough to keep that concealed for long. Her boy hero may be able to resort to an invisibility cloak, but in the real world, they just don’t exist. With a secret as sensational as that, it was only a matter of time until the inevitable happened, and then, of course, this apparently well-written and well-received crime novel which seems to have sold no more than 1,500 copies under its own steam, suddenly went stratospheric. And as with The Casual Vacancy, so with this. The book dominated crime lists, and crime reviews in newspapers, and crime sections in bookshops, making it even more difficult than it already was for other books – just as well-written, and just as well-received – to get a look in. Rowling has no need of either the ****f space or the column inches, but other writers desperately do. And now there’s going to be a sequel, and you can bet the same thing is going to happen all over again.

So this is my plea to JK Rowling. Remember what it was like when The Cuckoo’s Calling had only sold a few boxes and think about those of us who are stuck there, because we can’t wave a wand and turn our books into overnight bestsellers merely by saying the magic word. By all means keep writing for kids, or for your personal pleasure – I would never deny anyone that – but when it comes to the adult market you’ve had your turn. Enjoy your vast fortune and the good you’re doing with it, luxuriate in the love of your legions of fans, and good luck to you on both counts. But it’s time to give other writers, and other writing, room to breathe.

Source: If JK Rowling Cares About Writing, She Should Stop Doing It | Lynn Shepherd

Sheila Kitzinger: Pregnancy and childbirth author dies aged 86

Sheila Kitzinger: Pregnancy and childbirth author dies aged 86

Sheila Kitzinger: Pregnancy and childbirth author dies aged 86

Sheila Kitzinger: Pregnancy and childbirth author dies aged 86

ABC News 9 hrs ago

خليجية
© ABC News Sheila Kitzinger wrote more than 25 books on Pregnancy and childbirth.

Prolific author and anthropologist Sheila Kitzinger – who wrote more than 25 books on childbirth – has died in the United Kingdom at the age of 86.

In the 1960s and ’70s she developed the concept of a ‘birth plan’, which aimed to give more choice to pregnant women.

She believed mothers, not clinicians, should be the focus during childbirth.

Sheila Kitzinger came to be seen as a pioneer in her field and received an Order of the British Empire.

Her books included The New Pregnancy and Childbirth, and Understanding Your Crying Baby.

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Author Naomi Wolf suggests IS videos of hostages being beheaded are fake

Author Naomi Wolf suggests IS videos of hostages being beheaded are fake

‘Where are they getting all these folks from?’ Author Naomi Wolf is condemned for suggesting ISIS hostages are ACTORS and be-headings aren’t real

  • Writer, 51, posted a number of Facebook messages questioning footage
  • Asked if there was any record of the hostages being abducted initially
  • Claimed it would need at least five people to ‘stage an event like this’
  • Also suggested Obama’s deployment of troops in Africa to fight Ebola was a ploy for them to return infected by the deadly virus



خليجية

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Controversial: Naomi Wolf, 51, sparked fury on social media after questioning the authenticity of the ISIS beheading videos

Author Naomi Wolf has been accused of being ‘disrespectful’ after suggesting footage of hostages being beheaded by ISIS militants isn’t real.
The 51-year-old American writer made a series of controversial statements questioning the authenticity of the footage in a number of messages on her Facebook page.
The initial post in which the feminist activist questions where the terror group are ‘getting all these folks from’ was deleted.
In another post, she also said that the Obama administration was sending troops to West Africa to confront the Ebola outbreak so they could return with the deadly infection – justifying a military takeover of Africa.

Social media users quickly rounded on her with some suggesting her theories were ‘crazy’ while others said her views were ‘harmful’ and had disrespected the victims’ families.
A video released on Friday appeared to show British hostage Alan Henning being beheaded by Jihadi John.
He is the fourth person to have been brutally murdered at the hands of the extremists, and a fifth, former Army ranger Peter Kaggis, has been threatened as the next victim.
After making the controversial statements over the weekend, Wolf defended her actions saying she was criticizing the reporting of the story – suggesting the video had not been properly confirmed by two sources.
The post, that was later taken down, said: ‘OK two of the hostages just happened to go from long careers into the military to… sudden humanitarian work (same was true of the latest British hostage). Where are they getting all these folks from?
‘If someone is abducted there is a record with Amnesty and with Reporters without Borders. Can someone please confirm that these organizations have any record of this person having been abducted?
‘The NYT (New York Times) yesterday ran a depressingly sloppy editorial claiming that all the ISIS beheading videos must be real because ‘there are so many of them on youtube’.
‘THAT’s journalism? They also called ISIS ‘evil’ many times – which is not langauge of a news analysis, it is a theological category for some faiths and a Global War on Terror talking point… this may all be true but it takes five people to stage an event like this – two to be ‘parents’ – two to pose for the cameras… one in a ninja outfit… and one to contact the media that does not bother checking who ANY of these four other people are…’
During the social media backlash, Mark Boothroyd said: ‘Don’t insult these people who have given their lives for humanitarian work.
‘The activities of all these people have been well ********ed over the years. They are known people with families and friends who have supported them. Stop spreading conspiracy theories.’
Scroll down for video

خليجية

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Anger: This post, which has since been deleted, from Naomi Wolf caused controversy, saying the video was staged and questioning where the hostages who have been executed came from

خليجية

Retort: Following the post and the reaction on social media, Wolf clarified that ISIS are ‘super bad’

And Matt Hill added: ‘A minimal amount of research would show you you’re wrong – there’s plenty of information out there about the hostages.’
After noticing some of the responses, she took to her Facebook page again and wrote: ‘I stand by what I wrote today: the videos of beheadings need to be independently confirmed before they are part of the historical record. They may well be completely accurate but there are not yet independent confirmations that they are accurate.’

Another post said: ‘A commentator below self-identified as being the New York Times reporter covering the hostage crisis. This reporter asked me to take my post about asking for confirmation of the hostage story down, as this reporter said that keeping it up is "irresponsible" and not respectful to the pain of the families involved.

‘Once again to clarify. The reason I ask that media check and confirm a story like the series of videotaped beheadings of aid workers and journalists is that that is what journalists are supposed to do. It is sad and baffling to me that my post below reminding journalists to get two sources confirming information before they run stories repeating government talking points, is being interpreted as "a conspiracy theory".’
She also condemned President Obama’s decision to send troops to Western Africa to help combat the Ebola outbreak, suggesting the military will bring it back to the United States.
She said: ‘And…TV news in US reporting Department of Defense is sending three thousand troops to Liberia..troops with no medical expertise..to construct and run field hospitals for Ebola….then they will be quarantined for 21 days…and eventually come home.
خليجية

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‘Disrespectful’: One Twitter user reacted angrily to the statement suggesting the comments were ‘horrible’

خليجية

Reaction: Canadian commentator Colby Cosh said Wolf had crossed over into ‘baseless conspiracy theories’

خليجية

History: Another user referred to her past achievements when questioning her controversial views

‘A crazy idea as Liberia and Sierra Leone already have a dense infrastructure if medical aid organizations on the ground…many Western ones…that already have doctors nurses and well tested medical education networks that were activated to educate people about AIDs. I was in Freetown and witnessed this.
‘What they don’t have is enough doctors or supplies. They need the CDC not the Pentagon. So why send soldiers with no medical background?
‘A. Militarized Africa has long been on the agenda but B. Three thousand Ebola-exposed American troops creates a direct vector into the US and whatever happens a narrative can exist to justify military condoning of US populations…quarantining Americans…emergency measures to limit travel…crisis best left to military not civil authorities.
‘People in Liberia and Sierra Leone know perfectly well how to build more buildings for more beds..these are modern societies…they just need money. There is no practical reason to put our soldiers in the eye if ebola. That is why I dont (sic) like this narrative.’

UN’s Ban Ki-moon calls for unity to tackle Ebola crisis (related)

خليجية


خليجية

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Resolute: In her most recent post, the Author has said that she stands by what she wrote

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti…en-t-real

Author forced to pay back $22.5 million for invented holocaust memoir

Author forced to pay back .5 million for invented holocaust memoir

Woman who MADE UP entire bestselling holocaust memoir is forced to pay back .5 million after her lies are revealed 17 years later… and she’s not even Jewish

  • Misha Defonseca won .5 in a copyright case against her publisher
  • It was later revealed that her bestselling holocaust memoir was mostly fictional
  • Defonseca has been ordered to forfeit the money by a Massachusetts court

By ALEX GREIG and ASSOCIATED PRESS
PUBLISHED: 16:52, 11 May 2024 | UPDATED: 18:21, 11 May 2024



A woman who invented a wild tale of survival during the holocaust has been ordered to forfeit the .5 million judgement she won from her publishers by a Massachusetts court.
Published in 1997, Misha: A Mémoire of the holocaust Years is about a Jewish girl from Brussels who walked across Europe by herself after her parents were seized by Nazis.

Misha Defonseca, 76, and her ghostwriter Vera Lee won $32.4 million from publisher Jane Daniel and Mt Ivy Press in a copyright registration claim in 1998 in which Daniel was found to have conducted ‘highly improper representations and activities.’

خليجية

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Storyteller: Misha Defonseca admitted to making up most of her memoir about her childhood as a Jewish orphan in WWII

Daniel appealed, but in 2024 the Massachusetts Appeals Court upheld the judgement.

However, during the appeal process, inconsistencies in Defonseca’s outlandish tale began to attract the suspicion of Daniel, journalists, forensic genealogists, reports the Courthouse News Service.

In her memoir, Defonseca wrote that she trekked 1,900 miles across Europe in search of her parents. She spent months living in the forest with a pack of wolves, hiding from Nazis and in one encounter, stabbed a Nazi rapist to death.

These events all occurred when she was aged between seven and 11 years old, according to the book.

Following her trial loss, Daniel set out to determine whether Defonseca’s tale was truthful.

She eventually located a ******** that included Defonseca’s maiden **** – which in the book was Levy – and her date and place of birth.

خليجية

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One of the pack: In her memoir, Defonseca wrote that she lived for a time with a pack of wolves while hiding from Nazis

Her real ****, Daniel found, was Monica Ernestine Josephine De Wael, and she was not Jewish.

During the time she was supposed to have been communing with wolves and killing Nazis, Defonseca was in actual fact enrolled in a Brussels school.

Defonseca, now living in Massachusetts, has admitted that her best-selling book was an elaborate fantasy she kept repeating, even as the book was translated into 18 ********s and made into a feature film in France.

‘This story is mine. It is not actually reality, but my reality, my way of surviving,’ Defonseca said in a statement given by her lawyers to The Associated Press.

‘I ask forgiveness to all who felt betrayed. I beg you to put yourself in my place, of a four-year-old girl who was very lost,’ the statement said.

She admitted that her parents were arrested when she was four and she was taken care of by her grandfather and uncle.

[IMG]https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/05/11/article-2625612-1DBFF****0000578-716_306x472.jpg[/IMG]

+3

Bestseller: The book was not a huge hit in the U.S. but sold millions in Canada and Europe

Defonseca said she was poorly treated by her adopted family, called a ‘daughter of a traitor’ because of her parents’ role in the resistance, which she said led her to ‘feel Jewish.’

She said there were moments when she ‘found it difficult to differentiate between what was real and what was part of my imagination.’

Defonseca had been asked to write the book by publisher Jane Daniel in the 1990s, after Daniel heard the writer tell the story in a Massachusetts synagogue.

Daniel and Defonseca fell out over profits received from the best-selling book, which led to a lawsuit. In 2024, a Boston court ordered Daniel to pay Defonseca and her ghost writer Vera Lee $32.4 million, of which Defonseca received .5 million.

In 2024, the Superior Court found that Defonseca had committed a fraud and set aside the verdict. She appealed and on April 29, Judge Marc Kantrowitz, in what he described as ‘the third, and hopefully the last’ opinion on the matter, agreed that the truth of Defonseca’s story would have made a difference to the jury’s deliberations.

Judge Kantrowitz noted that Defonseca and Daniel had both acted ‘highly inappropriately,’ and expressed the Court’s hope that ‘the saga has now come to an end,’ reports Mondaq.

Read more:


Read more: Misha Defonseca MADE UP holocaust memoir, forced to pay back $22.5m to publisher | Mail Online

Legendary author Maya Angelou dies

Legendary author Maya Angelou dies

Damn this is making me cry. I’ve always loved her work but her poem at President Clinton’s inauguration touched me so deeply. I suspected I was pregnant and her words filled me with hope. I printed the poem and it still hangs in my daughter’s room.

Legendary author Maya Angelou dies
By Faith Karimi, CNN
updated 9:41 AM EDT, Wed May 28, 2024

Maya Angelou had an illustrious career as a poet, singer, dancer and director
She died at home in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, her literary agent said
One of her most famous works was "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings"

(CNN) — Maya Angelou, a renowned poet, novelist and actress whose work defied de******ion under a simple label, has died, her literary agent, Helen Brann, said Wednesday.

She died at her home in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Brann said.

A professor, singer and dancer, among other things, Angelou’s work spans different professions. She spent her early years studying dance and drama in San Francisco, California.

After dropping out at age 14, she become the city’s first African-American female cable car conductor.

Angelou later returned to high school to finish her diploma and gave birth to her son a few weeks after graduation. While the 17-year-old single mother waited tables to support her son, she acquired a passion for music and dance. She toured Europe in the mid-1950s with "Porgy and Bess," an opera production. In 1957, she recorded her first album, "Calypso Lady."

In 1958, Angelou become a part of the Harlem Writers Guild in New York and also played a queen in "The Blacks," an off-Broadway production by French dramatist Jean Genet.

Affectionately referred to as Dr. Angelou, the professor never went to college. She has more than 30 honorary degrees and taught American studies for years at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

"I created myself," she has said. "I have taught myself so much."

Angelou was born on April 4, 1928, in St. Louis, Missouri. She grew up between St. Louis and the then-racially-segregated Stamps, Arkansas.

The famous poet got into writing after a childhood tragedy that stunned her into silence for almost a decade. When she was 7, her mother’s boyfriend raped her. He was later beaten to death by a mob after she testified against him.

"My 7-and-a-half-year-old logic deduced that my voice had killed him, so I stopped speaking for almost six years," she said.

From the silence, a louder voice was born.

Her list of friends is as impressive as her illustrious career. Talk show queen Oprah Winfrey referred to her as "sister friend." She counted Martin Luther King Jr., with whom she worked during the Civil Rights movement, among her friends. King was assassinated on her birthday.

Angelou spoke at least six ********s, and worked as a newspaper editor in Egypt and Ghana. During that time, she wrote "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," launching the first in a series of autobiographical books.

"I want to write so well that a person is 30 or 40 pages in a book of mine … before she realizes she’s reading," she said.

Angelou was also one of the first black women film directors. Her work on Broadway has been nominated for Tony Awards.

Before making it big, the 6-foot-tall wordsmith also worked as a **** and sang with a traveling road show. "Look where we’ve all come from … coming out of darkness, moving toward the light," she has said. "It is a long journey, but a sweet one, bittersweet."

Author Gabriel Garcia Marquez dies at 87

Author Gabriel Garcia Marquez dies at 87

Quote:
Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Nobel Prize-winning author, dies at 87

By Todd Leopold, CNN

updated 8:04 AM EDT, Fri April 18, 2024

(CNN) — Gabriel García Márquez, the influential, Nobel Prize-winning Author of "One Hundred Years of Solitude" and "Love in the Time of Cholera," has died, his family and officials said.

He was 87.

The literary giant was treated in April for infections and dehydration at a Mexican hospital.

García Márquez, a native of Colombia, is widely credited with helping to popularize "magical realism," a genre "in which the fantastic and the realistic are combined in a richly composed world of imagination," as the Nobel committee described it upon awarding him the prize for literature in 1982.

He was sometimes called the most significant Spanish-******** Author since Miguel de Cervantes, the 16th-century Author of "Don Quixote" and one of the great writers in Western literature. Indeed, Chilean poet Pablo Neruda told Time that "One Hundred Years of Solitude" was "the greatest revelation in the Spanish ******** since the Don Quixote of Cervantes."

The author’s cousin, Margarita Marquez, and Colombia’s ambassador to Mexico, José Gabriel Ortiz, confirmed the author’s death to CNN on Thursday.

"We’re left with the memories and the admiration to all Colombians and also Mexicans because I think Gabo was half Mexican and half Colombian. He’s just as admired in Mexico as he is in (his native) Colombia, all of Latin America and throughout the world," Ortiz told CNN en Español.

Share your memories with CNN’s iReport

"I believe they were somehow emotionally ready for this regrettable outcome. They knew he was suffering from a complex, terminal disease and was an elderly man. I believe (Garcia Marquez’s widow Mercedes Barcha) was getting ready for this moment, although no**** can really prepare themselves for a moment like this."

In a televised speech Thursday night, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos declared three days of national mourning, ordering flags to be lowered to half-staff across the country.

The Author — known by his nick**** "Gabo" throughout Latin America — was born in the northern Colombian town of Aracataca, which became the inspiration for Macondo, the town at the center of "Solitude," his 1967 masterpiece, and referenced in such works as his novella "Leaf Storm" and the novel "In Evil Hour."

"I feel Latin American from whatever country, but I have never renounced the nostalgia of my homeland: Aracataca, to which I returned one day and discovered that between reality and nostalgia was the raw material for my work," reads a mural quoting the Author outside of town.

García Márquez was tickled that he had earned so much praise for his fertile imagination.

"The truth is that there’s not a single line in all my work that does not have a basis in reality. The problem is that Caribbean reality resembles the wildest imagination," he told The Paris Review in 1981.

A storyteller’s childhood

García Márquez’s early life was shaped by both familial and political conflict. His grandfather, a widely respected figure known as the Colonel, was a liberal military man who strongly disagreed with the political views of García Márquez’s father, a conservative telegraph operator who became a pharmacist. (His father’s ardent pursuit of his mother later inspired "Love in the Time of Cholera.")

Their political disagreement came to reflect that of Colombia as a whole, a country that spent a postwar decade in the grip of what was called "La Violencia," a civil war that followed the assassination of a populist leader.

García Márquez spent his early childhood with his grandparents while his parents pursued a living in the coastal city of Barranquilla.

Both his grandparents were excellent storytellers, and García Márquez soaked in their tales. From his grandfather he learned of military men, Colombian history and the terrible burden of killing; from his grandmother came folk tales, superstitions and ghosts among the living.

His grandmother’s stories were delivered "as if they were the irrefutable truth," according to the García Márquez site themodernword.com. The influence is obvious in García Márquez’s works, particularly "One Hundred Years of Solitude."

In 1936 the Colonel, died and García Márquez returned to his parents and their growing family. He was eventually one of 11 children, not to mention several half-siblings from his father’s affairs, a familial sprawl that also found its way into his books.

After finishing high school, García Márquez went off to college with dreams of becoming a writer. His parents, on the other hand, had plans for him to become a lawyer. Writing ended up taking precedence: When La Violencia broke out, García Márquez started contributing stories to a local newspaper and eventually became a columnist. He had also been exposed to writers such as James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Franz Kafka and especially William Faulkner, who had turned his own patch of land in Oxford, Mississippi, into the shape-shifting past and present of Yoknapatawpha County.

In the mid-1950s, García Márquez left Colombia for Europe, a move partly provoked by a story he’d written that was critical of the government. The distance, he later said, helped shape his perspective on Latin American politics.

For years, García Márquez had been writing and publishing fiction, including short stories in Latin American journals and a handful of longer works, including "Leaf Storm," which was published in 1955. But it wasn’t until 1967 with the publication of "One Hundred Years of Solitude" that he broke through to a wide audience.

‘100 Years’ of literary renown

The novel is set in Macondo, a town founded by the patriarch of the Buendia family, José Arcadio Buendia. Over the generations, members of the family are set upon by ghosts and visions, fall in love, dream of riches and fight in wars. Natural events take on supernatural aspects — rains that last years, plagues that create memory loss. It is a tapestry of almost biblical proportions in which reality and spirit swirl and merge, a world unto itself — as well as a commentary on the politics and history of the world at large.

"The narrative is a magician’s trick in which memory and prophecy, illusion and reality are mixed and often made to look the same. It is, in short, very much like Márquez’s astonishing novel," wrote The New York Times in a 1970 review upon the release of the English translation by Gregory Rabassa.

García Márquez worked on "Solitude" tirelessly, selling off family items, living on credit, smoking up a nicotine frenzy. Upon its release, the book became an instant bestseller in Latin America and was equally successful in English. It has been estimated to have sold in excess of 20 million copies — some sources say as many as 50 million — in two dozen ********s.

The book didn’t ease all of García Márquez’s problems, however. As a vocal leftist and defender of Castro’s Cuba, he was regularly limited or denied visas by the United States until President Bill Clinton, a fan of "Solitude," revoked the ban.

Clinton commented on Garcia Marquez’s death Thursday.

"I was saddened to learn of the passing of Gabriel García Márquez," he said in a statement. "From the time I read ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’ more than 40 years ago, I was always amazed by his unique gifts of imagination, clarity of thought, and emotional honesty. He captured the pain and joy of our common humanity in settings both real and magical."

García Márquez was also involved in a feud with onetime friend writer Mario Vargas Llosa, a Peruvian and a Nobel laureate, who punched the Colombian in the face in 1976 — believed to be over politics but later revealed to be over Vargas Llosa’s wife.

García Márquez’s ensuing works were generally praised. They included "The Autumn of the Patriarch" (1975), "Chronicle of a Death Foretold" (1981) and "The General in His Labyrinth" (1990). He is said to be the most popular Spanish-******** Author in the world.

"Love in the Time of Cholera," with an English translation published in 1988, was a particular bestseller. The love story, which was turned into a 2024 movie, was referenced in such works as the 2001 movie "Serendipity" and the finale of the TV series "How I Met Your Mother."

García Márquez’s style and impact have been widespread.

He is credited with spearheading "el Boom," attracting attention to a generation of Latin American writers, including Vargas Llosa and Mexico’s Carlos Fuentes. Magical realism is now an accepted genre, to the point that some critics believe it has been overused.

And he prompted a focus on Latin American politics — protesting the 1973 CIA-aided coup in Chile, calling attention to corruption and free speech issues in South America and around the world.

He never gave up journalism.

"I’ve always been convinced that my true profession is that of a journalist. What I didn’t like about journalism before were the working conditions," he told The Paris Review. "Now, after having worked as a novelist, and having achieved financial independence as a novelist, I can really choose the themes that interest me and correspond to my ideas."

He was one of the most honored — and highly respected — authors on Earth, particularly in parts of the world where literature is taken as seriously as politics.

"On behalf of Mexico, I would like to express my sorrow for the passing of one of the greatest writers of our time, Gabriel Garcia Marquez," tweeted Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto.

Colombia’s President summed up the author’s presence on Twitter.

"Giants never die," Santos tweeted.

For all of his immortality, however, Garcia Marquez preferred the here and now. Asked about the impact of dreams on his dreamlike writing, he said he’d rather focus on reality.

"Life itself is the greatest source of inspiration," he said. "I see dreams as part of life in general, but reality is much richer.

"But maybe," he added, "I just have very poor dreams."

CNN’s Rafael Romo and CNN en Español’s Nelson Quiñones and Ana Melgar contributed to this story.

Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Nobel Prize-winning author, dies at 87 – CNN.com