Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez — book cover

Book details

Love in the Time of Cholera

by Gabriel García Márquez

1985

About the book

In the twilight of the nineteenth century, Florentino Ariza falls into a lifelong obsession with Fermina Daza, a woman who eventually rejects his youthful advances to marry Dr. Juvenal Urbino. While Urbino works to eradicate cholera in their Caribbean port town, Florentino waits decades, engaging in hundreds of affairs while maintaining his internal devotion to his first love. The narrative spans fifty years, tracking Fermina’s transition into a stable, high-society marriage and Florentino’s rise in the riverboat industry. When Juvenal Urbino dies in old age, Florentino immediately reaffirms his commitment to Fermina, forcing both characters to confront the physical realities of aging and the persistence of desire long after youth has vanished.

Readers of historical fiction and psychological drama value this book for its unsentimental examination of obsession versus companionate love. It attracts those interested in how long-term commitment functions outside of conventional romance. The reader walks away with a detailed understanding of how social class and public health shape private lives in colonial societies. The story provides a candid look at the physical decline of the human body and argues that emotional attachment can operate with the same intrusive intensity as a biological disease.

Details

Published
1985
Language
EN