Literature overtakes history, for literature gives you more than one life. It expands experience and opens new opportunities to readers.
— Carlos Fuentes
The United States condoned dictatorships in Latin America for much of the 20th century.
Like all of Latin America, Mexico after independence in 1821 turned its back on a triple heritage: on the Spanish heritage, because we were newly liberated colonies, and on our Indian and black heritages, because we considered them backward and barbaric. We looked towards France, England and the U.S., to become progressive democratic republics.
You have an absolute freedom in Mexican writing today in which you don't necessarily have to deal with the Mexican identity. You know why? Because we have an identity... We know who we are. We know what it means to be a Mexican.
I have two children who died before reaching 30, so who am I to complain about being alive?
Under the veneer of Westernization, the cultures of the Indian world - which have existed for 30,000 years! - continue to live. Sometimes in a magical way, sometimes in the shadows.
Don't classify me, read me.
I love having critics for breakfast.
Work is what saves you.
The United States is very good at understanding itself, and very bad at understanding others.
I am a morning writer; I am writing at eight-thirty in longhand and I keep at it until twelve-thirty, when I go for a swim. Then I come back, have lunch, and read in the afternoon until I take my walk for the next day's writing.
The new world economic order is not an exercise in philanthropy, but in enlightened self-interest for everyone concerned.
The real bombs are my books, not me.
There must be something beyond slaughter and barbarism to support the existence of mankind and we must all help search for it.
Perfect order is the forerunner of perfect horror.
I am not interested in slice of life, what I want is a slice of the imagination.
What's happened at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq is one of the grossest violations of human rights under the Geneva Conventions that we have record of. It is simply monstrous.
Contrary to the macho culture of Mexico, both my grandmothers were very brave young widows. I was always very close to these hard-working, intelligent women.
There are now 30-year-old Mexican writers who do great novels in which Mexico isn't even mentioned.
I like fighting. I get into rows all the time.
I've lost audiences, I've recovered them.
The possibility of being as free with the camera as we are with the pen is a fantastic prospect for the creative life of the 21st century.
I believe in books that do not go to a ready-made public. I'm looking for readers I would like to make. To win them, to create readers rather than to give something that readers are expecting. That would bore me to death.
Here among my books, my wife, my friends and my loves, I have plenty of reasons to keep living.
I started my own magazine with drawings, commentary, news, film reviews and drawings.
Writing requires the concentration of the writer, demands that nothing else be done except that.
The United States has written the white history of the United States. It now needs to write the black, Latino, Indian, Asian and Caribbean history of the United States.
I am a literary animal. For me, everything ends in literature.
One puts off the biography like you put off death. To write an autobiography is to etch the words on your own gravestone.
What the United States does best is to understand itself. What it does worst is understand others.
What I want is to respond to the challenge posed by the mass media - to permit the novel to say what can only be said by narrative - to allow it to be itself.
I always felt a little worm inside me: 'Now you need to write a novel with a woman protagonist.'
I had the good fortune of having a happy, closely knit family.
In Latin America, even atheists are Catholics.
U.S. foreign policy is Manichaean. It's like a Hollywood movie. You have to know who has the white hat and who has the black hat and then go against the black hat.
I'm a writer, not a genre.
Cuba needs a dose of perestroika.
I have no literary fears.
My system for staying young is to work a lot, to always have a project on the go.
I must write the book out in my head now, before I sit down.
Diplomacy in a sense is the opposite of writing. You have to disperse yourself so much: the lady who comes in crying because she's had a fight with the secretary; exports and imports; students in trouble; thumbtacks for the embassy.
The historical problem of the United States is to admit that it is a multiracial and multi-ethnic nation.
I use a lot of film images, analogies, and imagination.
I don't think any good book is based on factual experience. Bad books are about things the writer already knew before he wrote them.