Literary Devices in Love in the Time of Cholera
Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory
García Márquez's use of imagery and symbolism isn't all that straightforward, but it sure is interesting. Keep in mind that there may be more than one reading of much of the novel's imagery –...
Setting
García Márquez's descriptions of the setting paints the picture of a complex and colorful city. The setting not only provides a lot of clues about the characters' personalities, interests, and s...
Narrator Point of View
Our narrator doesn't just jump back and forth between different characters, but also back and forth in time. He (we're calling the narrator a 'he' in this case because the author is a man...you ca...
Genre
Magical realism is a genre in which magical events occur alongside normal, everyday ones. In Love in the Time of Cholera, for example, Fermina might sense the flesh and blood presence of her dead...
Tone
One important aspect of any magical realist text (see "Genre" for a definition) is that the author recounts seemingly incredible events without sounding the least bit surprised, impressed, or spook...
Writing Style
You may have noticed that the plot of this story doesn't progress in a linear fashion. In fact, García Márquez starts us off pretty near the end of our protagonists' lives, and then spends most...
What's Up With the Title?
What a weird title. Love generally makes us think of sweet things like puppy dogs and rainbows, right? Not bacterial infections of the small intestine that lead to watery diarrhea and death. We...
What's Up With the Epigraph?
The words I am about to express:They now have their own crowned goddess.– Leandro DíazThis epigraph does just what a good epigraph should do. It makes us say, "Huh? What the heck does this epi...
What's Up With the Ending?
Think about any of the romantic comedies you've ever watched. From When Harry Met Sally to Say Anything to Love Actually, what's the Golden Rule that unites them all? The lovers get together at t...
Tough-o-Meter
The twisting complexity of this book's plot makes it challenging enough to be plenty interesting. Events don't unfold linearly, so it can be a little tough to keep them straight. As well, charact...
Plot Analysis
Ah, youth, beauty, and raging hormones.Florentino is majorly crushing on the young and gorgeous Fermina Daza, and he's succeeds in getting her to agree to marry him...eventually. We hate to say it...
Booker's Seven Basic Plots Analysis
Love in the Time of Cholera is, in a weird way, kind of a whacked-out version of a quest story. The problem is, we're not really sure if we can get behind the hero's journey. Let us explain.Flore...
Three-Act Plot Analysis
Fermina and Florentino fall in love and carry on an illicit correspondence behind her father's back. Lorenzo finds out and takes Fermina away from the city so that she'll forget about Florentino,...
Trivia
García Márquez based Love in the Time of Cholera on his parents' love story. Read all about it in this short article, called "Serenade: How My Father Won My Mother," published in The New Yorker...
Steaminess Rating
This book is all about love, so as you might imagine, it's got plenty of sex. One of the main characters, Florentino Ariza, actually keeps a record of all his sexual conquests in a book he titles...
Allusions
Alexis Carrel, Man, the Unknown (1.107). Carrel was a French surgeon, biologist, and eugenicist. In Man, the Unknown, published in 1935, Carrel recommends a plan of forced euthanasia to rid societ...