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This Happened

This Happened — May 28: Golden Gate Bridge Opens

The Golden Gate Bridge was inaugurated on this day in 1937. Construction of the Golden Gate Bridge began on January 5, 1933, taking a total of four years and three months.

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Where is the Golden Gate Bridge located?

The Golden Gate Bridge is located in San Francisco, California, spanning the Golden Gate strait, which connects San Francisco Bay to the Pacific Ocean. The total length of the Golden Gate Bridge is approximately 1.7 miles (2.7 kilometers).

Who designed the Golden Gate Bridge?

The Golden Gate Bridge was designed by Joseph Strauss, an American engineer who specialized in building bridges and other large structures.

What was the significance of the Golden Gate Bridge?

The completion of the Golden Gate Bridge was a major milestone in engineering and construction, as it was the longest suspension bridge in the world at the time. It also had significant cultural and economic impacts, providing a vital link between San Francisco and Marin County and helping to facilitate economic growth and development in the Bay Area. Today, the Golden Gate Bridge is an iconic symbol of San Francisco and a popular tourist attraction.

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Ideas

Shame On The García Márquez Heirs — Cashing In On The "Scraps" Of A Legend

A decision to publish a sketchy manuscript as a posthumous novel by the late Gabriel García Márquez would have horrified Colombia's Nobel laureate, given his painstaking devotion to the precision of the written word.

Photo of a window with a sticker of the face of Gabriel Garcia Marquez with butterfly notes at Guadalajara's International Book Fair.

Poster of Gabriel Garcia Marquez at Guadalajara's International Book Fair.

Juan David Torres Duarte

-Essay-

BOGOTÁ — When a writer dies, there are several ways of administering the literary estate, depending on the ambitions of the heirs. One is to exercise a millimetric check on any use or edition of the author's works, in the manner of James Joyce's nephew, Stephen, who inherited his literary rights. He refused to let even academic papers quote from Joyce's landmark novel, Ulysses.

Or, you continue to publish the works, making small additions to their corpus, as with Italo Calvino, Samuel Beckett and Clarice Lispector, or none at all, which will probably happen with Milan Kundera and Cormac McCarthy.

Another way is to seek out every scrap of paper the author left and every little word that was jotted down — on a piece of cloth, say — and drip-feed them to publishers every two to three years with great pomp and publicity, to revive the writer's renown.

This has happened with the Argentine Julio Cortázar (who seems to have sold more books dead than alive), the French author Albert Camus (now with 200 volumes of personal and unfinished works) and with the Chilean author Roberto Bolaño. The latter's posthumous oeuvre is so abundant I am starting to wonder if his heirs haven't hired a ghost writer — typing and smoking away in some bedsit in Barcelona — to churn out "newly discovered" works.

Which group, I wonder, will our late, great novelist Gabriel García Márquez fit into?

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