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Love in the Time of Cholera
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Love in the time of cholera (Starting from March '2013)
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In their youth, Florentino Ariza and Fermina Daza fall passionately in love. When Fermina eventually chooses to marry a wealthy, well-born doctor, Florentino is devastated, but he is a romantic. As he rises in his business career he whiles away the years in 622 affairs--yet he reserves his heart for Fermina. Her husband dies at last, and Florentino purposefully attends the funeral. Fifty years, nine months, and four days after he first declared his love for Fermina, he will do so again
I am through first 25 pages. Seems better than One hundred years of solitude, will have to wait and see


You can refer my review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

am on page 50 or so. It reminds me of one hundred years...hope this one won't result in a new nickname for me!
the element of magical realism is at work here too? I cannot imagine a parrot that talks too much and that too coherently, a wind that suddenly destroys landscape and carries of young children. I also cant get into the character of the painter who died and his sweetheart who helped him die.
the element of magical realism is at work here too? I cannot imagine a parrot that talks too much and that too coherently, a wind that suddenly destroys landscape and carries of young children. I also cant get into the character of the painter who died and his sweetheart who helped him die.

I don't remember the exact sequence of scenes and pages but I remember the ending. Florentino is a restless soul who travels and haunts himself throughout his life. He finally finds peace in his lost and found love.
What is great about this book is how, GGM has portrayed the unconventional true love. How many of us have a chance to find love that was lost? And what if you have spent your whole life searching and looking out for it but never lost hope in the process? And after 50 years, it does happen. Both Florentino and Fermina meet as if they knew it would happen some day. Ah! I can go on and on ...


Is there anything called 'true love'? That love, which surpasses all obstacles, even time? Is love all patient, as we find in Florentino Ariza? Or do we fall in love with the person who is around us most of the time? Like Fermina Daza falls in love with Florentino as a school girl. Or when she falls in love with her husband Juvenal Urbino despite early feelings of loathing! She starts depending again on her former flame Florentino after Urbino's death. If love is a thread, it is not necessary that it be used to stitch a particular garb; it can create several attires.
Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez raised a few such questions in my mind. Comments welcome...

Considering the way Fermina Daza treated Florentino Ariza,I don't understand his true-love feeling.
(view spoiler)
May be I'm not romantic enough :) ; but he sounds rather delusional to me.

This book made me think about my own beliefs about love and what being loyal to one's soul mate really means. If marriage is one platform on which love is built (as in the case of Fermina and Urbino) then life is another platform, a larger much larger one, where love runs wild, uncaged, uninhibited. And I might even re-read it some day to check if my belief system has remained the same or if I feel any different about these characters then.

do you mean GoodReads and Indian Readers? if so, this site is just to discuss books or review them, and not to download or read online.


I have read only 100 pages but I am liking it so far. The author is able to lead me in another world and I like this. It is hard to put down the book.

There is this all-lifelong romantic love of Florentino for Fermina; the love of Fermina for her husband though it arrives only after the marriage; love at the end of their lives among Fermina and Florentino; all the "quick" loves of Florentino while he was waiting for his lifelong love...
There is no judgment, every kind of love is accepted and well depicted in order to understand its meaning and its nature.

Here we are starting with the first non-Indian group read of 2013 .
Please participate.