Submitted by Binky-Answer896 t3_10a38ye in books
When I was a young thing, I read A Hundred Years of Solitude, and it was amazing to me. It made me read a lot of South American literature I probably would never even have heard of. So I was so excited to buy Love in the Time of Cholera when it was first published.
I was so disappointed. It was such a slog. And tbh, reading it at that time, I was all “old people! in love! eeeww!”
Fast forward. I picked up a copy in a thrift store last week, and started reading it. I was only about maybe 20 or 30 pages in before I started crying. The description of how Fermina Daza, after many long years of marriage, bathed her husband (who’s not even her One True Love!) and helped him dress — it’s so simple, and was so completely meaningless to me when I first read it.
But now.
When my dad’s Parkinson’s was really advanced, my mom did these same things for him every day. When I read these pages, I had that feeling that this big hand just reached out of the book right into my chest and squeezed.
I stayed up all night to finish reading this book again. If you are like me, and 20 or 30 years ago, this book was boring as hell, give it another chance. You’ll appreciate more now.
crixx93 t1_j41s0lz wrote
GGM said that the biggest inspiration for the book was his own parents's marriage.