Rabat – Mario Vargas Llosa, one of Latin America’s most celebrated writers and a Nobel laureate, died on Sunday in Lima at the age of 89.
His son, Alvaro Vargas Llosa, shared that his father passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by family.
For more than half a century, Vargas Llosa shaped global literature with his sharp intellect and fluid prose. He stood at the forefront of the Latin American literary boom, not just as a novelist but as a public thinker unafraid to take political stands.
In 2010, he received the Nobel Prize in Literature for a body of work that includes Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter, The War of the End of the World, and Death in the Andes. But long before the international acclaim, he built his career on stories that questioned power and identity, often digging into Latin America’s most turbulent moments.
His voice rang loud in books, essays, and newspapers. In Peru, where he was born in 1936, he lived through dictatorship, revolution, and economic collapse. In 1990, he stepped into politics, launching a campaign for the presidency during a time of crisis. His run ended in defeat against Alberto Fujimori, a little-known academic who would later face prison for corruption and human rights abuses.
After the loss, Vargas Llosa moved to Spain but kept close ties to Latin America. He became a fierce critic of authoritarian governments, especially those led by the new generation of leftist leaders. Despite his political involvement, he insisted that literature remained his true home.
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His fiction often drew on personal history. The Time of the Hero, his first novel, drew from his experience at a Peruvian military academy. In A Fish in the Water, he recounted his childhood and political ambitions with striking honesty.
His work earned admiration for its formal boldness. He shifted points of view, jumped across time, and gave voice to characters caught in the machinery of politics, faith, and revolution. Not all his stories came from political history. The Bad Girl, published in 2006, told the story of a long, obsessive romance, and many saw it as a late-career high point.
Vargas Llosa never separated literature from life. His relationship with Gabriel García Márquez, once warm, ended in a public falling out in 1976. They never reconciled. Over time, Vargas Llosa’s shift away from revolutionary ideals placed him at odds with many of his contemporaries. His break with Fidel Castro in the 1970s marked a turning point, politically and personally.
He described himself not as a politician but as a writer who had once stepped into politics out of necessity. Yet his views continued to stir debate long after he left the campaign trail.
His personal life also made headlines. At 19, he married Julia Urquidi, a woman ten years older and the former wife of his uncle. Their unusual story inspired Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter. Years later, he married his cousin Patricia, with whom he had three children. That marriage ended in 2015 after he began a relationship with Spanish socialite Isabel Preysler, which later dissolved in 2022.
Peru’s President Dina Boluarte called him “the most illustrious Peruvian of all time.” That sentiment echoes far beyond Peru. For many readers across the world, Vargas Llosa’s novels served as a mirror to power, violence, and human contradiction.
He leaves behind pages filled with struggle, complexity, and beauty, a legacy that belongs not only to Peru, but to literature itself.
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