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Of Love And Other Demons

Gabriel Garcia Márquez
 
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From the Nobel Prize-winning author of Love in the Time of Cholera, a startling new novel -- the story of a doomed love affair between an unruly copper-haired girl and the bookish priest sent to oversee her exorcism.

Of Love and Other Demons is set in a South American seaport in the colonial era, a time of viceroys and bishops, enlightened men and Inquisitors, saints and lepers and pirates. Sierva Maria, only child of a decaying noble family, has been raised in the slaves' courtyard of her... (show more)

From the Nobel Prize-winning author of Love in the Time of Cholera, a startling new novel -- the story of a doomed love affair between an unruly copper-haired girl and the bookish priest sent to oversee her exorcism.

Of Love and Other Demons is set in a South American seaport in the colonial era, a time of viceroys and bishops, enlightened men and Inquisitors, saints and lepers and pirates. Sierva Maria, only child of a decaying noble family, has been raised in the slaves' courtyard of her father's cobwebbed mansion while her mother succumbs to fermented honey and cacao on a faraway plantation. On her twelfth birthday the girl is bitten by a rabid dog, and even as the wound is healing she is made to endure therapies indistinguishable from tortures. Believed, finally, to be possessed, she is brought to a convent for observation. And into her cell stumbles Father Cayetano Delaura, the Bishop's protege, who has already dreamed about a girl with hair trailing after her like a bridal train; who is already moved by this kicking, spitting, emaciated creature strapped to a stone bed. As he tends to her with holy water and sacramental oils, Delaura feels "something immense and irreparable" happening to him. It is love, "the most terrible demon of all." And it is not long before Sierra Maria joins him in his fevered misery.

Unsettling and indelible, Of Love and Other Demons haunts us with its evocation of an exotic world while it treats, majestically the most universal experiences known to woman and man.

Natasha Richardson's film credits include Nell, Widow's Peak, The Comfort of Strangers, and The Handmaid's Tale. She has appeared on stage in Anna Christie, High Society, Hamlet, and A Midsummer Night's Dream, among others. (show less)

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Reviews (See all 458) Write a reviewfor this

It's a hit!

I enjoyed the subtle complexities this seemingly "small" work offers. The multiple characters demonstrate depth even when he or she may be introduc... (show more)

I enjoyed the subtle complexities this seemingly "small" work offers. The multiple characters demonstrate depth even when he or she may be introduced and over with in a matter of paragraphs or pages. Garcia Marquez composes a moving narrative that reads as a painting with strokes of shading and illumination in rich detail, mixing gross realism and otherworldly fantasy. The social commentaries also adds to the importance of the details conveyed in such a medium. Commentaries on family, religion, medicine, madness, class and economic structures, the various meanings and manifestations of love both selfish and selfless charge the reading with some urgency. The cost of oppression manifests itself through these redeeming and irredeemable characters and events. (show less)

 
 
by Facebook User
No, it's a flop!

This book was difficult to follow. Iwould have stopped reading it after the first chapter if i didn't have to write about it for a class.

 
Tina Wymer Fletcher
 
by Tina Wymer Fletcher
More Reviews
  • Elliott Sofia Evelina Eamonn

    This is my first Marquez-book and I loved it! A beautiful story set in the 1700s about Sierva Maria, a twelve year old girl who gets bitten by a dog infected with rabies. And everyone the dog bites gets sick and then die, including the dog. But not Sierva Maria and because of that people start to think that she is possessed by demons and she gets send to a convent to be cured..
    This story is about finding love in a strange place and I think about superstition and how big of an influence the ... (show more)

    This is my first Marquez-book and I loved it! A beautiful story set in the 1700s about Sierva Maria, a twelve year old girl who gets bitten by a dog infected with rabies. And everyone the dog bites gets sick and then die, including the dog. But not Sierva Maria and because of that people start to think that she is possessed by demons and she gets send to a convent to be cured..
    This story is about finding love in a strange place and I think about superstition and how big of an influence the church had at that time.
    This book was so easy to get into, I just love the way he writes, sometimes almost like a fairytale.
    I finished it in a couple of hours and I never wanted it to end. (show less)

     
     
    by Elliott Sofia Evelina Eamonn on Oct 07, 2009 at 09:54AM

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  • Nancy Ann Borja

    This haunted me for quite some time after. lol. Visions of red hair growing on after death does get creepy, ya know. Not for Catholic conservatives, and probably will suit die-hard romantics best. Highly visual, I think... but it's too dragging. Saw way too much.

     
     
    by Nancy Ann Borja on Dec 01, 2009 at 12:28PM

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