García Márquez was raised by his maternal grandparents for the first ten years of his life in Aracataca, eventually moving to Sucré to live with his father, a pharmacist. García Márquez’s grandfather was a great storyteller, and this combined with his grandfather’s progressive politics were two of García Márquez’s greatest influences. García Márquez’s was sent away to school in Baranquilla, where he began writing humorous poems and comic strips, though he was seen as a serious young man. He moved to Bogotá while completing his secondary studies and stayed on there for college to study law, though he still prioritized his writing. After an uprising, García Márquez moved to Cartagena to finish his degree and work as a reporter for the newspaper there. García Márquez never finished his higher studies, instead growing his career as a journalist, working in Cartagena, Barranquilla, Bogotá, and Caracas, Venezuela. García Márquez met his wife, Mercedes Barcha, while she was in school, and they decided to wait for her to finish while he traveled as a foreign correspondent. In 1958 they married and the following year, their first son Rodrifo García was born. The family traveled by Greyhound bus through the Southern United States and then settled n Mexico City, before their second son, Gonzalo was born. He published his first novella,
Leaf Storm, n 1955 and then
One Hundred Years of Solitude in 1967. After the publication, García Márquez moved his family to Barcelona, Spain, for seven years, and his recognition earned him the ability to help as a facilitator in negotiations between the Colombian government and guerillas there. His outspoken opinion on U.S. Imperialism prevented him from acquiring a visa by the U.S., a ban that was not lifted until Bill Clinton took office. García Márquez continued to publish creative work, including his second most well known
Love in the Time of Cholera in 1985, two memoirs, and several screenplays. In 1999 he was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer, but treatment proved successful and the cancer went into remission. In 2012, his brother announced that García Márquez was suffering from dementia, and in April 2014, he was hospitalized in Mexico due to several infections, but he died later that month of pneumonia.