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Printed from https://web1.writing.com/main/profile/blog/sindbad/day/11-12-2025
Rated: 13+ · Book · Experience · #2171316

As the first blog entry got exhausted. My second book

Evolution of Love Part 2
November 12, 2025 at 1:19am
November 12, 2025 at 1:19am
#1101457
He wrote his masterpiece in poverty so extreme they sold everything—even her hair dryer—just to afford postage to mail the manuscript. The book won the Nobel Prize.
Gabriel García Márquez first saw Mercedes Barcha when he was 13 years old, at a school dance in Sucre, Colombia. She was striking—confident, beautiful, with an air of self-possession unusual for a girl her age.
He was immediately smitten. In a moment of adolescent bravado, he declared to his friends: "I'm going to marry that girl."
She barely noticed him.
In what might have been a joke or a dare, they had a mock "wedding" ceremony as teenagers—the kind of playful thing children do. But for García Márquez, it wasn't entirely a joke. He was serious about Mercedes from the moment he saw her.
The problem was, he had nothing to offer. He was a poor scholarship student from a large, struggling family. Mercedes came from a prosperous family—her father was a pharmacist, and they lived comfortably. The social gap between them was significant.
So García Márquez did what poor, ambitious young men have always done: he left to make something of himself. He pursued journalism, writing, literature—determined to become someone worthy of Mercedes Barcha.
They stayed in sporadic contact over the years. He would write her letters. She would respond occasionally, guardedly. He pursued his career in journalism, moving from city to city, always broke, always writing, always thinking about the girl he'd declared he would marry when he was 13.
It took 18 years.
Finally, in 1958, when García Márquez was 31 years old and had established himself as a serious journalist and writer, he returned for Mercedes. They married—officially this time—and began building a life together.
They had two sons, Rodrigo and Gonzalo. García Márquez continued his journalism career while working on fiction. He published several novels and short story collections that were well-received critically but didn't make much money.
And then, in 1965, something happened that would change both their lives forever.
García Márquez was driving from Mexico City to Acapulco when, suddenly, the entire plot of a novel appeared in his mind—complete, whole, as if dictated by some external force. It was the story of the Buendía family across multiple generations in the fictional town of Macondo, a multi-generational saga of love, war, magic, and solitude.
He turned the car around immediately and drove straight home.
When he arrived, he told Mercedes: "I need to write this book. It's going to take a long time, and we're going to run out of money. But I have to do this."
Mercedes looked at him and said, simply: "Write it."
What followed were 18 months of intense, obsessive work. García Márquez wrote every single day, disappearing into his study for hours, emerging only for meals. He was possessed by the story, by the Buendías, by Macondo.
And their financial situation became increasingly desperate.
García Márquez had quit his regular journalism work to focus entirely on the novel. They were living on savings that were rapidly disappearing. Bills piled up. Creditors called. The pressure was immense—not just the creative pressure of writing what he hoped would be his masterpiece, but the crushing practical reality of supporting a family with no income.
At one point, García Márquez sold their car—their only valuable possession—just to buy a few more months of time to write.
Mercedes managed everything. She stretched every peso as far as it would go. She dealt with landlords, utility companies, grocery bills. She shielded her husband from the constant financial emergencies so he could focus entirely on writing. She told the children to be quiet when Papa was working. She protected his creative space with fierce determination.
Friends and family thought they were crazy. Why was García Márquez wasting time on a novel when he could be earning money as a journalist? Why was Mercedes enabling this impractical dream when their children needed to eat?
But Mercedes believed in him. She believed in the book. And she refused to let anything—poverty, doubt, pressure—stop him from finishing it.
Finally, in 1966, after 18 months of work, the manuscript of One Hundred Years of Solitude was complete. It was massive—nearly 500 pages, the story of seven generations of the Buendía family, filled with magical realism, tragedy, comedy, history, and myth.
García Márquez and Mercedes looked at the finished manuscript with exhausted triumph. They'd done it. He'd written the book he'd been carrying inside him. Now they just needed to send it to the publisher in Buenos Aires.
And that's when they discovered they didn't have enough money for postage.
The manuscript was heavy. International postage from Mexico City to Argentina was expensive. They counted their money—every peso they had left in the house. It wasn't enough.
So Mercedes did what she'd been doing for 18 months: she found a way.
She went through their apartment, gathering everything of value they hadn't already sold. Jewelry. A radio. Kitchen appliances. And famously, her hair dryer—a luxury item she'd treasured.
She sold it all. She took the money and went with García Márquez to the post office.
They packaged the manuscript carefully—this 500-page document that represented 18 months of work, years of poverty, and all their hopes for the future. They paid for the postage. They handed it over to the postal clerk.
And they walked out of the post office completely, utterly broke. Not a peso left. Nothing of value left in their apartment. Their entire future was now in a package traveling thousands of miles to a publisher who might or might not like the book.
As they walked away from the post office, Mercedes—exhausted, anxious, having just sold everything including her beloved hair dryer—said to her husband: "Now all that's left is for the novel to turn out bad."
It was a joke, but it was also the truth. They'd gambled everything on this book.
The novel arrived in Buenos Aires. The publisher, Editorial Sudamericana, began reading it.
And almost immediately, they knew they had something extraordinary.
One Hundred Years of Solitude was published in June 1967. Within weeks, it became a sensation. The first edition sold out immediately. A second printing sold out. Then a third. Within months, the novel was being translated into dozens of languages.
Critics called it a masterpiece. Readers couldn't stop talking about it. The book that García Márquez had written in poverty, that Mercedes had sacrificed everything to help him finish, became one of the most celebrated novels of the 20th century.
It has since sold more than 50 million copies worldwide. It's been translated into 46 languages. It's considered one of the greatest novels ever written in any language.
And in 1982, largely on the strength of One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel García Márquez was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
The book pulled them from poverty instantly. Suddenly, they had money—not just enough to live on, but genuine wealth. García Márquez became one of the most famous writers in the world. They bought a beautiful home in Mexico City. They traveled. They never had to worry about money again.
But García Márquez never forgot what it cost. And he never let anyone forget Mercedes's role.
In interviews for the rest of his life, he always credited Mercedes as the person who made One Hundred Years of Solitude possible. He called her "the real author" of the book because she'd created the conditions that allowed him to write it. He said she was the strongest person he'd ever known.
Mercedes and García Márquez stayed married for 56 years, until his death in 2014. She died in 2020 at age 87.
Their love story began with a 13-year-old boy declaring he'd marry a girl who barely knew he existed. It was tested by 18 years of separation, 18 months of desperate poverty, and the gamble of selling everything they owned just to mail a manuscript.
And it endured—through global fame, Nobel Prizes, and decades of partnership—because Mercedes Barcha believed in a broke writer's dream when no one else did.
He wrote his masterpiece while they lived in poverty so extreme they sold their car, their possessions, even her hair dryer—just to afford the postage to mail the manuscript to a publisher.
The book became one of the greatest novels ever written and won him the Nobel Prize.
But the real story isn't about the prize or the fame. It's about a woman who sold everything she owned so her husband could finish a book that might fail.
As she said walking out of the post office, broke and anxious: "Now all that's left is for the novel to turn out bad."
It turned out to be one of the greatest novels in human history.
And none of it would exist without her hair dryer money and her unwavering faith.


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Printed from https://web1.writing.com/main/profile/blog/sindbad/day/11-12-2025