He showed me the inscription and then he showed me something else. The people in charge of investigating crimes in Bogot. I mean, I have been to that book fair. I should say something and do something very meaningful so it seems like Im doing something. Its like really absurd because it was like, not this, this is bigger than me and I have no idea what Im going to do. Camila: No, she felt it was more important to stick to the agreement they had made with lvaro. He said that they had found the book in a box in the neighborhood La Perseverancia, in downtown Bogot. And Ill explain a little: David was in charge of the Macondo stall at the Bogot Book Fair. Commissioners recently approved the purchase of a property at 7992 Soquel Drive in Aptos near the Aptos Village Square shopping center. Did you know NPR has an app? Camila: Yes, it is massive. She awakens and he puts a small bundle in her lap while he goes to the bathroom. So they started to cause a kind of traffic jam. YOU are an adventurer, and the merchants of Camila: lvaro needed a moment before he could start the interview. He noted signs on the way advising that dogs and Mexicans were prohibited; he thus found himself barred from hotels because of his dark Latin complexion, the bigoted clerks mistaking him for a Mexican. Where did that number come from? Its a decrepit building. From all over the world. But I dont think the bit about the price is so important. Others, including the supervisor, realize that something had dropped to the ground: a box. The people have compassion for him and do everything they can to offer dignity to the dead. Camila: Edgar figures around 300 people or thereabouts. what happened?. They didnt give lvaro a lot of details either. Weve got a recommended case here. He remembers it well. "It was a very bad time for me," he has confessed, "a suffocating time. And later he said no, librovejero as in ropavejero [book peddler, as in junk peddler]. I didnt even open the display case. Like saying that lvaro had stolen it himself, which seemed like the meanest possible thing to me. lvaro: Well, sure, so they can say something, you know? And well I I was already freaking out. He said, I cant believe it. She told him that she was going to write the story herself and send it to eltiempo.com. But on Friday, six days after the robbery, lvaro was in his bookstore, working, when a friend called him and said: lvaro: Brother, so the book turned up?, lvaro: Its just that my dad heard it did. For instance, people started coming up with really crazy and sometimes very disrespectful theories. And I said to myself crap, what am I going to do? Thats the bad part. Supervisor: We have a lot of contact with a number of merchants, lets call them, the good and the bad ones. Someone who steals millions and millions of dollars gets eight years in prison and someone who steals a book by Gabo gets 20. Some news outlets, for example, said that they had found it inside of a house and others said it was at a street stand. 20 years in prison for someone who stole a book by Gabo and eight for someone who committed crimes against humanity. But on Friday, six days after the robbery, lvaro was in his bookstore, working, when a friend called him and said: Its just that my dad heard it did. Camila: Eight police officers went. Yes. A little later, we went down to the press conference where there were several media outlets. This makes Damaso a hard character to like. I have the worst news you could imagine. Directed by. Synopsis. You won't find any mention of levitation or flying carpets or crocodile children. Juan Vicente Valbuena: The Attorney General considers the theft of Gabriel Garca Mrquez work a serious attack on our cultural heritage. David: I mean, at that point I was much more worried and I really wanted to go figure out what had happened with the police because I was really worried that this was going to turn into a big story in the media and we hadnt even filed a report. He was tired, he hadnt been sleeping well and he could hear his phone going off, even when no one was calling. I told him, I dont want to talk right now and I hung up. As a collector, lvaro knew exactly what a first edition looked like. Camila: And, Daniel, I cant tell you how difficult it was to find someone in the police department who would agree to talk to me or who was able to. They put a type of caution tape in front of the display cases, like at a crime scene, and the order was not to move until lvaro arrived. We have accomplished something very important, very important. Good morning. He asked Is this your book?. lvaro: He stood there looking at me and he said Had you seen this cover before? And I told him no. So I tossed it in a bag, said thank you and left. Those who stole the work can suffer penalties ranging from 6 to 20 years, as well as those who commit the crime of handling stolen goods, meaning, buying this stolen good, could get 4 to 12 years in jail. And when he got to the stand. I know, he talks really fast, its almost like he doesnt even stop to breathe. They hadnt filed a complaint. In that part of the city-center, there are several blocks filled with stands that for years have been selling books, mostly used books. But at one point David decided to stop giving interviews. Listen to music by There Are No Thieves In This Town on Apple Music. I met with him on that day at the door of the library. Camila: They took lvaro, David, Edgar, Luca and two other women who were in charge of taking care of the display case to the fairs security office. Its huge. lvaro: And I saw on Facebook someone posted, Hooray! David: I mean, its just not right. Dont move, dont move, theyre shooting.. "There Are No Thieves in This Town" . . Well, he hadnt set foot in the fair since the robbery. Daniel: Hold on. And what about that figure, that they were going to sell it for 120 million or something like that? We have a lot of contact with a number of merchants, lets call them, the good and the bad ones. And what about the price? Damaso is a night prowler who frequents the local bar and pool hall. He dates his interest in writing to an impulse to draw comics as a child. Everything was very melodramatic. I freaked out. A coven in Bogot. The officer asked us not to use his name. And it was the first time the ACLI was in charge of the bookstore at the fair. Everyones spirits were as low as they could be. Learn more about Radio Ambulante and this story by visiting our website: radioambulante.org. The assistant of General Palomino, the chief of police, was calling him. Camila: But Luca is the kind of person who almost never calls. We showed up and they said, listen, there was a guy here who was interested but hes going to go to Preservencia to buy it there because those guys are pissed off and dont want to come over here because they know the book is a touchy subject.. But at the time no one thought it was a shoddy lock. and any corresponding bookmarks? So everyone who went into the pavilion would see the bookstore. There were women who said Im no thief! What does that mean? Camila: Edgar was at the other end of the store and he rushed to where Luca was. It does, however, bring to our attention the author's grasp on subtlety, on the quiet moments that can give a story depth and beauty. lvaro: But my phone doesnt even have a data plan and the fair didnt have wifi and all that. Camila: The officer asked us not to use his name. Ok, so lvaro bought this book in 2006. lvaro: And in Montevideo I really like to walk down a street called Calle Tristn Narvaja, which is a street that is full of secondhand bookstores. I want to get this over with fast. And I said, jokingly, if this isnt done by Thursday, Im donating it to the National Museum on Friday.. by Jonathan Rosenbaum October 26, 1985. And I dont want to tell him, but I have to. The major calls the press chief and tells her the whole story. 20 years in prison for someone who stole a book by Gabo and eight for someone who committed crimes against humanity. Damaso is not very good at his profession, for instance, he stole billiard balls instead of anything of value. But made-up people and stories are featured on the show to make fun of whats going on in the country. In Mexico City ("with only a hundred dollars in my pockets"), he began slowly, and with great difficulty, a new career as a screen writer. Thats a big deal. It was in Uruguay. So he thought that maybe if they searched people they could find it. And that proves to us that Colombians, like Garca Mrquez says, are capable of the worst as well as the best. what am I supposed to say? He insisted that the book was important. We are back with Radio Ambulante. Edgar: Our heads were down. Daniel: In other words, pay for the book. He brought a satchel to carry the books, since he thought if he left with the box people would say he was the thief. Camila: lvaro just arranged the books and made a verbal agreement with David that lvaro was the only person who could touch his books. I told them about the story I was doing and that I wanted to interview the lieutenant. And its like, oh, no, David: And when she tells me, they stole lvaros One Hundred Years of Solitude. Camila: That first edition of One Hundred Years wasnt the only one that lvaro had acquired in his life. Listen: So, if you want to buy a book and you know that on the intersection of streets 10 and 13 youll get your socks stolen with your shoes still on, well youre going to turn around, do you understand? He later told an Argentinean writer that he could have dictated an entire chapter on the spot if he had had a tape recorder. Undetermined. I was very limited in what I could do and I appreciated then that in the novel the writer has complete control." That there must have been some boss yelling at someone: this has to be found because its getting found. Then someone did something. . The inscription says: To lvaro Castillo, the book peddler, like yesterday and as always, from your friend Gabriel. So that Saturday afternoon Luca was helping at the cash registers when a friend came to visit her and asked her who had the keys to the display cases. Edgar figures around 300 people or thereabouts. But if they capture one person and two people tried to sell the book and the third person is the buyer, itll close the day all three are caught. But the guard was a little confused and at one point asked what are we looking for, again?. . And Ill explain a little: David was in charge of the Macondo stall at the Bogot Book Fair. lvaro: And I added a note to the book which I wrote on the first page. 64. Gautibonza, the chief of police for Bogot, told him that when they found out about the robbery. There was a major, there was a colonel, there was a captain from the Heritage department, there was an officer from the SIJIN and from the DIJIN. Thats a bit excessive, dont you think? At that point we organized ourselves and got in three cars. Thanks for exploring this SuperSummary Study Guide of "No One Writes To The Colonel" by Gabriel Garca Mrquez. In January of 1965, while driving from Mexico City to Acapulco, he began plans for 100 Hundred Years of Solitude. Find Alt.Latino on the NPR One app and at npr.org/podcasts, Hi, Im Daniel Alarcn. Show me any old book you see. And sometimes he would show me books and I would have to say man, thats a new book. I looked at the display case and the lock was missing. Gautibonza, the chief of police for Bogot, told him that when they found out about the robbery. As soon as he got off the phone with the police, he called David. I mean, a lot of years are going to go by but the case isnt going to close. There are No Thieves in This Town. He asked Is this your book?. They hadnt filed a complaint. The film follows a still unsolved murder from the 1890's in New England. Realized it was a trick. lvaro: And she says lvaro, you have no idea what kind of shit storm this has caused. Were you able to figure out how much it would really cost? A large part of his Garca Mrquez collection which he had spent years compiling. Daniel: In other words, she didnt follow Davids instructions? Gracias, Gabo. Others, including the supervisor, realize that something had dropped to the ground: a box. Others said they couldnt speak because they believed they were about to catch the group that had stolen the book. Camila: The assistant of General Palomino, the chief of police, was calling him. They described them as a young olive-skinned man who was about 1.6 meters tall [about 53] and a young blonde woman. And no one has been able to explain where that number came from. lvaro just arranged the books and made a verbal agreement with David that lvaro was the only person who could touch his books. And if you hear about it or they come by to try to sell it, youd better give us a call.. He only worked harder and produced more. He was at his own bookstore, almost on the other side of the city, in the middle of an event with a writer. Instead I said, yes, of course.. I said, the worst thing for Luca has to be the worst of the worst of the worst., Luca: And David says, what? It was translated into English by Gregory Rabassa, a winner of the National Book Award for his translation of Julio Cortzar's Hopscotch. And I dont want to tell him, but I have to. His desk was called the "Cave of the Mafia"; there, he worked for eight to ten hours a day for eighteen months. 08:37 Upon being served a "filet mignon with a peach and syrup on top of it" in New Orleans, he fled to Mexico City without further delay. But what are their names, man? Here, he delves into themes of corruption and censorship like the poet-journalist he was. based on a story by Juan Rulfo. Publisher. from your Reading List will also remove any And if you hear about it or they come by to try to sell it, youd better give us a call.. Heres the book. And the guys? I dont know. I said, lvaro, youre not going to believe it but I think Im happier than you are.. The worst. The perspective shows irony because the story implies the town is full of thieves. And you would think that a thief is ready for something, dont you think?. Find top songs and albums by There Are No Thieves In This Town, including Of the Things I Would Not . Camila: He told me that every Monday morning, the nearly 1,300 men in the SIJIN gather in a square downtown and do what he calls a developments check, in other words, they are updated on that weeks investigations. Thats not news for Telfono Rosa. Perhaps the greatest. Camila: And of course, the business owners dont want their clients to get robbed. So, of course, for lvaro, if the news came from La Lucirnaga it had to be a joke. Some of them told me that they had already said what they could about the issue. And that General Palomino wanted to deliver it to him in person. The books had cards with bibliographic information. NPR One joins you this Thanksgiving while you travel or wait in line or wait for a friend. Find top songs and albums by There Are No Thieves In This Town including Of the Things I Would Not Have Omitted to Note and Treasure, Within Your Little Hour of Grace and more. A large part of his Garca Mrquez collection which he had spent years compiling. Because the whole thing started to break down. Damaso stop the wrong persecution. It was the second time I cried. Acesta este unul dintre putinele filme Fox care continua produsul sub proprietatea Disney. Camila: Exactly. Not a computer or a telephone or a photo. Daniel: What does that mean? 20 years in prison for stealing a book? Its hosted by Felix Contreras, and Felix. Camila: The display cases where they were being displayed had been set up by pavilion organizers. is one of the most important newspapers in the country and Telfono Rosa is a news section or rather, a gossip section about celebrities in Colombia that comes out once a week, every Sunday. In his Nobel lecture in Stockholm, he declared: "This, my friends, is the very scale of our solitude . Edgar thought that not much time had passed between when they had been robbed and when they noticed. I made calls almost every week. There came a moment when I lost faith in thinking that the book would turn up if I kept searching people. 20 years in prison for stealing a book? Thank you for listening to Radio Ambulante. And you start to feel like a thief, like youre the one whos guilty, because of the interrogation. In this context it means something like ridiculous. I could tell that it was deeply painful for him because his eyes were watering and his mouth was trembling. They looked like something out of the last century: there were two panes of glass one was sliding and they were held shut by a little lock, a keyhole with a saw-toothed shaped plate. If Luca is calling me, its because its important. Nabo: the Black Man Who Made the Angels Wait, Someone Has Been Disarranging These Roses, The Incredible and Sad Tale of Innocent Erendira and Her Heartless Grandmother, No One Writes to the Colonel and Other Stories. But on the other hand, he was certain he didnt want lvaro to find out from someone else. To ask for the phone number of the person in charge of Telfono Rosa. Daniel: Thats the director of the Association of Independent Booksellers, right? Daniel: Or rather, they dont close But they get filed away? Removing #book# lvaro: Now that I think about it, it really was a flimsy lock. And that year the fair had a record number of visitors. User 2: This country is totally charro. The first thing I thought was, how am I going to face lvaro when I see him?. Camila: But finally the major told me sure, I could interview the officer that had taken me to his office because he was the one who conducted the whole operation. . Im calling David. Camila: They described them as a young olive-skinned man who was about 1.6 meters tall [about 53] and a young blonde woman. Well, I tried everything to find out where Palomino got that 40 thousand dollar figure, but I didnt get an answer. Daniel: In other words, to a valuable book, to a media scandal. Someone who steals millions and millions of dollars gets eight years in prison and someone who steals a book by Gabo gets 20. Thousands upon thousands of people were going to go through there. Daniel: And what about the price? And well, the fair ended on Monday and.. Everything was going back to normal. Perhaps the greatest. Camila: The friend gave him the email address. Daniel: Of course, everyone understands how valuable that book is. And the protocol goes on and on. No, he donated several other things. And Ill explain: Edgar and Luca had told the fair security about the robbery. Each stroke, each seemingly monotonous rant, is intentional and gives strength to the whole. Luca: Something weird is going on, he said. It was a first edition, and worse still, one that Garca Mrquez signed for lvaro. So, of course, the pressure for everything to be ready and go well was enormous. Well, as far as I know, the only book by Garca Mrquez that was stolen was that one. He picked up the book and looked at the price: 180 Uruguayan pesos, which at that time was about seven dollars. The title was changed at the suggestion of the author's friends but not without some objection from Garca Mrquez. They are absolutely magisterial." So my major says: Heres the book. Discuss the best option with your vet; 100 Hundred Years of Solitude was published initially in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1967 by Editorial Sudamericana. The first time I tried was in June 2015. The original title of the novel had been Este Pueblo de Mrida (The Town of Dung). Neither floods nor plagues, nor famines nor cataclysms, nor even the eternal wars of century upon century have been able to subdue the persistent advantage of life over death. lvaro: Came up to me looking very friendly and said, You dont know how proud we are to have recovered your book. And on his desk there was a cardboard box for a router. Yeah, I know. Stream ad-free with Amazon Music Unlimited on mobile, desktop, and tablet. Weve got a recommended case here. Camila: How did you feel after that call? There they took their statements. You guys who are going to be downtown, a book by Gabriel Garca Mrquez was stolen in one of those bookstores, so you need to get in touch with your contacts about it.. That was the version I heard, the version that was in the press. Their number? I dont know, those guys came to sell the book but they are asking for a lot.. When they get on the highway, near the neighborhood, one of the police officers says: The officers jump out of the cars, and he tells me that there were four or five guys there when the police came and they started running. by Gabriel Garca Mrquez. Edgar: He stopped in front of the display, saw that the book was missing and put his hands on his head. Garcia Marquez has left us but, thankfully, his work remains. And I turned around and saw that the book was missing. I'm thinking particularly of No One Writes to the Colonel, his second book. Camila: Yes. Four in Cuba, two in Colombia and this one in Uruguay. Edgar: There came a moment when I lost faith in thinking that the book would turn up if I kept searching people. But finally the major told me sure, I could interview the officer that had taken me to his office because he was the one who conducted the whole operation. I really didnt want to call lvaro. He said that the National Police were investigating the case and that he had to make it clear that not only were the individuals who stole the book responsible, but also anyone who bought it. story of the day in all of the newspapers, broadcasts and news bulletins. ( ) ( ) ( . Those who stole the work can suffer penalties ranging from 6 to 20 years, as well as those who commit the crime of handling stolen goods, meaning, buying this stolen good, could get 4 to 12 years in jail. Camila: That youre not going to go where they steal your socks with your shoes still on. They arrived at the police station and the chief of police, Palomino. This is what he told me: No, the investigation is still ongoing. In other words, people who sell things with dubious origins. That was the phrase the supervisor used. Camila: Well, you cant hear it very well, but she thanks lvaro, obviously, and says that this book is the start of a great collection that the library wants to create, and that this book in particular is important not just because of its value as a piece of heritage, but also because of what its theft meant for the country. There Are No Thieves in This Town Summary Damaso is a 20-something layabout and petty thief married to a middle-aged washerwoman named Ana. The ones that have a restricted lane. Very hard. at the Book Fair in Bogot. This very same box. Just then the squad car arrived to pick up lvaro. Camila: He knew there was nothing he could do. They took all of the books out of the display case and started packing them up. It seems like there was some kind of agreement to turn over the book, and thats that. Its hosted by Felix Contreras, and Felix is your guide into the world of Latino arts and culture. More than a year ago, in May 2015. He said that no one was going to settle down until that book was found. So my major says: Heres the book. Listen: Supervisor: So, if you want to buy a book and you know that on the intersection of streets 10 and 13 youll get your socks stolen with your shoes still on, well youre going to turn around, do you understand? Then I opened it to the page with the inscription and said, yes, this is my book, and I started to cry. I ran to the door and told the security guards that from that moment on no one could leave without being searched. But he hadnt even thought about the media. Everything was very strange. Though promising enough, all his previous works can be seen as but preliminary exercises to this masterpiece. I think that was the only time I showed any anger. 04. Well, you cant hear it very well, but she thanks lvaro, obviously, and says that this book is the start of a great collection that the library wants to create, and that this book in particular is important not just because of its value as a piece of heritage, but also because of what its theft meant for the country. If they had bags from another store, we asked them to open them. Listen to music by There Are No Thieves In This Town on Apple Music. But at one point David decided to stop giving interviews. I said, the worst thing for Luca has to be the worst of the worst of the worst., And David says, what? This book belongs to my country and Im going to donate it to the Colombian National Library because from the moment that most Colombians showed their scorn for this act, it became part of everyones heritage. They were like CSI or something. He had sold the rest, but the one at the fair was special because it had been signed by Gabo. They radioed the poor police officer. Based on a short story by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, in which he narrates the misadventures of people living in a small town that discovers that the billiard balls have disappeared from the only center of . Yes, very weird. Why? lvaro: I was in total disbelief. Supervisor: When they get out to run, they hear gunfire. And I added a note to the book which I wrote on the first page. Major, but the book that was stolen at the last Book Fair? And finally, the vendor. The inscription says: To lvaro Castillo, the book peddler, like yesterday and as always, from your friend Gabriel. The story is all over the world.. And I said, I dont know. So he said, Do you want me to give you the email of Telfono Rosa at. She had sustained them by borrowing from friends, paying for groceries on monthly installments, and not paying any rent to the landlord for six months. Camila: But on the other hand, he was certain he didnt want lvaro to find out from someone else. We investigate all kinds of crimes dealing with kidnapping and theft in all its forms. No one did. I said, this is really funny. So that Saturday afternoon Luca was helping at the cash registers when a friend came to visit her and asked her who had the keys to the display cases. Personajul principal din Guy, Ryan ReynAvatar: Calea Apeis a zis ca nu a mai avut o aventura pe cinste de la filmul Deadpool pana acum. Camila: Edgar thought that not much time had passed between when they had been robbed and when they noticed. Collection efficiency is aggravated by poor route planning, narrow road . In that part of the city-center, there are several blocks filled with stands that for years have been selling books, mostly used books. Find top songs and albums by There Are No Thieves In This Town, including Of the Things I Would Not Have Omitted to Note and Treasure, Within Your Little Hour of Grace and more. Anyone can come to see it, but always under the supervision of one of the officials in the room. lvaro: Realized it was a trick. Edgar: And I would tell them A first edition of One Hundred Years of Solitude is missing.. At 8 a.m., his 11-year-old son interrupts Aurelio's work to tell him that the mayor is there and wants his tooth pulled. But the supervisor started to check other areas to see if they had been offering the book as well. Edgar: And he said return my book or pay for it. In person? Dozens of national and international media outlets continued to call lvaro and David. But at the time no one thought it was a shoddy lock. In other words, to a valuable book, to a media scandal. Thats not news for Telfono Rosa. The shopkeeper pointed out where it was. Or about 20 thousand dollars. He stopped in front of the display, saw that the book was missing and put his hands on his head. He had sold the rest, but the one at the fair was special because it had been signed by Gabo. We went to another place. lvaro: Were only first editions by Garca Mrquez, which made a kind of general timeline starting with his first published book to his last. And I said, I dont know. So he said, Do you want me to give you the email of Telfono Rosa at El Tiempo?. GPS: You have arrived at your destination. The Theme of Solitude. National Police line, good morning. Not at all. 0 Ratings 6 Want to read; 0 Currently reading; 0 Have read; There are No Thieves in This Town. Camila: In other words, people who sell things with dubious origins. That was the phrase the supervisor used. Presenter: It seems like yet another typical event in the unusual and magical country of Macondo, but it is real. pockmarked (adjective) covered or disfigured with pitted scars or marks on the skin left by pustules or pimples. The worst. Read the Spanish transcript here.. Read an English translation here. To get there, head to the Village of Outcasts in A film adaptation of "There Are No Thieves in This Town" is released. Edgar: Show me any old book you see. And sometimes he would show me books and I would have to say man, thats a new book. Camila: Yeah, I know. Garca Mrquez had died a year earlier, in April 2014, and this book fair was being held in his honor. Edgar and the guard stood at the exit of the Pavilion and told everyone who tried to leave. Supervisor: Yes, it is a provisional file. He called his mom but she didnt answer. Radio Ambulante tells the stories of Latin America. That day around noon his friend called him back. What are you trying to find?. So I started to feel really really bad. The officers took me to a major and then I retold the whole story: about Radio Ambulante, the theft, the authorization. Neither Rouge or Thank you for listening to Radio Ambulante. And I saw on Facebook someone posted, Hooray! Carolina Guerrero is the CEO. Edgar didnt talk to me at all. lvaro still didnt tell anyone anything. Like great, now what? Damaso gets whats coming to him in the end. Interviews with cultural icons like Rita Moreno and Carlos Santana as well as contemporary vanguards like Calle 13 or author Junot Diaz. Some of the eight police officers went after the men. Luca: And I said, David, I have some of the worst news you could get at the fair., David: She tells me, David, the worst thing has happened. wasnt the only one that lvaro had acquired in his life. Before we go back to our story I want to tell you about another NPR podcast, one about music, called Alt.Latino. I want to get this over with fast. And I said, jokingly, if this isnt done by Thursday, Im donating it to the National Museum on Friday.. I mean, at that point I was much more worried and I really wanted to go figure out what had happened with the police because I was really worried that this was going to turn into a big story in the media and we hadnt even filed a report. He brought a satchel to carry the books, since he thought if he left with the box people would say he was the thief. And on top of that the Telfono Rosa comes out once a week. What a country. The major calls the press chief and tells her the whole story. David: Its that kind of moment when you put yourself in the third person and say, what now? And he opened the box and there was the book. Edgar took the responsibility of explaining to them exactly what was going on. I got there to see what was going on. Writer: There Are No Thieves In This Town. One day, before the start of the fair, when they were setting up the bookstore, lvaro came with his books and arranged them himself. Supervisor: So I spend a lot of time with them because sometimes theyre victims of the gangs that operate downtown too. Camila: But if they do capture someone, then it will close. And finally, the vendor. Yes, up to 20 years. I was waiting for them to take me to his office. And the protocol goes on and on. Its unbelievable. Paint is peeling off the walls and sometimes you get the feeling that the building is abandoned. Until finally in April 2016 they gave me an appointment to meet with the lieutenant in charge of the case. There they took their statements. Daniel: And what did he say about recovering the book? Camila: I have no idea, but you can imagine that he or she might threaten him or something, right? to doze (verb) to sleep lightly. And, well, we already know how that call went. In This Town There Are No Thieves. There are no Thieves in This Town - This story is about a thief named Damaso. 76-106. And he didnt blame whoever was there or anything, either. Camila: Good morning. Finally, he was awarded the 1982 Nobel Prize in Literature. There Are No Thieves in This Town Balthazar's Marvelous Afternoon Montiel's Widow One Day after Saturday Artificial Roses Big Mama's Funeral A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings The Sea of Lost Time The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World Death Constant Beyond Love The Last Voyage of the Ghost Ship Blacaman the Good, Vendor of Miracles And my phone started ringing. But at the time no one thought it was a shoddy lock. And how many people did they search? He tells me, the police are coming now so you can file a report. Their exchange is a short one, yet as power is reversed and the mayor occupies a vulnerable position, it effectively highlights the role of manipulation in a corrupt society. Well, obviously I wasnt going to get in an argument with him and say, no, what are you talking about?. They gave it back to me in this little box. Like saying that lvaro had stolen it himself, which seemed like the meanest possible thing to me. Garca Mrquez sent the first three chapters of 100 Hundred Years of Solitude to Carlos Fuentes, who along with the Argentinean writer Julio Cortzar was an early fan and supporter. At other times he worked as an editor and once did publicity for the J. Walter Thompson office in Mexico City. Fuentes was so impressed that he wrote to a Mexican magazine: "I have just finished reading the first seventy-five pages of Cien Aos de Soledad. And lvaro was a secondhand book collector. So he said ah well, Ill sell it to you for six dollars. I should say something and do something very meaningful so it seems like Im doing something. Its like really absurd because it was like, not this, this is bigger than me and I have no idea what Im going to do. Camila: The weekend went by and lvaro was still getting calls for interviews. Supervisor: Ah, yes. Camila: His friend asked him to tell her everything in detail. Why would the theft of a single book mean so much to a country like Colombia? lvaro: And I said to myself crap, what am I going to do? Youre crazy, what are you thinking?!. Yes. Those were tears of joy. In 1970, the novel was chosen as one of the twelve best books of the year by many American critics; in 1972, Garca Mrquez won the Rmulo Gallegos Prize in Venezuela and the Books Abroad/Neustadt International Prize for Literature. Camila: The officers jump out of the cars, and he tells me that there were four or five guys there when the police came and they started running. Camila Segura: It starts with a call from David Roa to lvaro Castillo. lvaro: Edgar didnt talk to me at all. David: I said, lvaro, youre not going to believe it but I think Im happier than you are.. No, of course not. Camila: Exactly. Until Friday, around two in the afternoon, he went back to one of the bookstores on the intersection of streets 10 and 13. In other words, he wasnt just worried about how he was going to pay for the book, but also about what would become of the association. So I didnt take them out. Hold on. Supervisor: When they said, hey, come here, sargeant. Whats going on, man? Theyre trying to sell that book. What? Yeah. And who are they? I dont know, theyre some guys from La Perseverancia.. I knew this was a very serious problem but what I was worried about was the institutional issue. lvaro: And when I turned my head and looked, I saw a first edition of One Hundred Years of Solitude. He knew there was nothing he could do. Damaso is a 20-something layabout and petty thief married to a middle-aged washerwoman named Ana. Consuelo: What the loss of this book meant to the country. And what it meant for the whole country. Camila: That night the story was aired on national and international news. Edgar: I followed people who walked past me up to the door before they could leave and I asked them to open their bags. Damaso finds Ana sitting on their bed, fully clothed. However no one will believe Damaso at this point. Because he got him old books. But if they do capture someone, then it will close. I hope you find the book. And I started to cry. What he did say was that the book had been prepared to be sold when it was discovered. They questioned and doubted everything I said. Not even me. There was another girl who started crying, another bookseller, for no apparent reason because she didnt have anything to do with what was happening, but it was just seeing all of the commotion. But before he left he asked to use their restroom. I hold the rank of supervisor. Interviews with cultural icons like Rita Moreno and Carlos Santana as well as contemporary vanguards like Calle 13 or author Junot Diaz. But the supervisor started to check other areas to see if they had been offering the book as well. Download our mobile app now. See more Details Edit Release date September 9, 1965 (Mexico) Country of origin Mexico Language Spanish Also known as There Are No Thieves in This Village Production company Grupo Claudio But. And they decided to act. And the lieutenant was nowhere to be seen. One of them is The Golden Cock. The book wins the Primera Plana prize in Argentina on June 20. David: If Luca is calling me, its because its important. While Edgar was searching people, Luca knew that she had to call someone, but she thought: I cant tell lvaro myself. But made-up people and stories are featured on the show to make fun of whats going on in the country. How long were they at it? Having found the book in record time was a victory for the police: only six days after the report was filed. They hired two security guards who were only tasked with watching the bookstore, and on top of that, they agreed that one person on their staff would be at the cases at all times. Camila: So they agreed the donation would be on Thursday, May 14th at 4pm. Penguin. Garca Mrquez had now written four books of literary merit: the novels Leaf Storm (1955) and The Evil Hour (1961); a novella entitled No One Writes to the Colonel (1961); and a short story collection, Big Mama's Funeral (1962). We know they were going to sell it for more than 120 million pesos. Which means the news wouldnt come out for another seven days. Comedy. And on top of that, the bookstore was going to be at the exit of the Macondo Pavilion, which was clearly the most important one at the fair. And well, Im telling you all this, Daniel, because I sat there for almost two hours and I couldnt believe how much bureaucracy I had to deal with. Edgar: Under regular security procedure, they shouldve informed the police. When he returns, she asks him what they are good for and he replies, to play billiards. But I dont think the bit about the price is so important. When I went out to eat breakfast, I also went by the bookstore. Then I opened it to the page with the inscription and said, yes, this is my book, and I started to cry. In 1970, 100 Hundred Years of Solitude was published in English by Harper & Row. Hey man, you heard anything? No, man.. Taking out the cards, like they were shit to me, and leaving them on the desk. lvaro: And a boy who was somewhere between 10 and 12 years old comes up to me and says hey, arent you the one they stole the book from?. They looked like something out of the last century: there were two panes of glass one was sliding and they were held shut by a little lock, a keyhole with a saw-toothed shaped plate. From all over the world. Faced with this awesome reality that must have seemed a mere utopia through all of human time, we, the inventors of tales, who will believe anything, feel entitled to believe that it is not yet too late to engage in the creation of the opposite utopia.". Or about 20 thousand dollars. Then he wrote the facts: when it was stolen and recovered, and it ends with this: Today, May 14th 2015, I am handing it over to the National Library of Colombia so that it may remain there and serve as a symbol of gratitude for all Colombians. Camila: Not knowing what he was going to do, Edgar put the box in storage and ordered that no one touch it. Camila: And well, Im telling you all this, Daniel, because I sat there for almost two hours and I couldnt believe how much bureaucracy I had to deal with. Edgar and the guard stood at the exit of the Pavilion and told everyone who tried to leave. So I went to the SIJN offices. Camila: About 40 thousand dollars. But they didnt. Camila: They said they had found out that someone had the book and that this person had set up a meeting with a possible buyer. During all this, David wasnt at the fair. It concerns as the titles suggests a large man who drowns, then washes up on the beach of a small village. Camila: Edgar thought that someone who worked there had taken it but Luca explained that lvaro was the only one with the key. A relevant case is when a person is robbed and that person has some important societal status. Why? I dont know what kind of expression I had because I couldnt see it, but I know it didnt look like I was angry. They live in a small rented room near the center of town. And I turned around and saw that the book was missing. The worst. Under regular security procedure, they shouldve informed the police. Camila: Edgar said something similar to me: Edgar: The fact that the culprit was never found gives me the feeling that things were done a little like the whole thing wasnt so transparent. That night the story was aired on national and international news. And David Roa was the one who asked lvaro to loan him all of those books. "I didn't know anyone was allowed to write things like that. And that they had already identified and intercepted him. He said that the National Police were investigating the case and that he had to make it clear that not only were the individuals who stole the book responsible, but also anyone who bought it. But well, moving past the technicalities, when lvaro arrived at the stand he was really impressed to see all of these people, including criminologists who were dusting for fingerprints. According to the supervisor, they didnt catch them. Turning point 2 - Damaso is caught by Rouge while he was returning the billiard balls. I dont know I dont know anything. This very same box. It starts with a call from David Roa to lvaro Castillo. Camila: And that General Palomino wanted to deliver it to him in person. When they said, hey, come here, sargeant. Whats going on, man? Theyre trying to sell that book. What? Yeah. And who are they? I dont know, theyre some guys from La Perseverancia.. Exactly. His name is Menganno and. We investigate all kinds of crimes dealing with kidnapping and theft in all its forms. Daniel: The people in charge of investigating crimes in Bogot. Dont move, dont move, theyre shooting.. So, of course, the first thing the supervisor does is call the chief of police to tell him that he has this information, and his chief tell his own boss to tell him. Camila Segura is the senior editor at Radio Ambulante. You won't find any mention of levitation or flying carpets or crocodile children. What can be done? So they started to cause a kind of traffic jam. Camila: And, well, we already know how that call went. Daniel: Welcome to Radio Ambulante, from NPR. This story is about a thief named Damaso. The blackman takes the blame for Damasos crime. Camila: They say that they are meeting on a foot bridge near the neighborhood. But that was on Sunday, right? THERE ARE NO THIEVES IN THIS VILLAGE En este pueblo no hay ladrones. Welcome to Radio Ambulante, from NPR. It was around eight at night by the time he went to Macondo to get his books. Happy and absolutely incredulous. 174 times the minimum wage, enough to buy, I dont know, a small apartment in the southern part of Bogot. Heres the book. And the guys? I dont know. Daniel: How come they hadnt even filed a complaint? Hey Hey Bad Day (Bonus) There Are No Thieves In This Town. Camila: The lieutenants desk was the same as the others. Camila: Thousands upon thousands of people were going to go through there. Almost impossible. Find us on NPR One in your app store. And Ill explain: Edgar and Luca had told the fair security about the robbery. I was almost expecting him to start cursing and shouting and get violent. Camila: And Im Camila Segura. It involves a poor, unlicensed dentist, Aurelio Escovar, who is called upon by the village mayor to remove an infected tooth. Garca Mrquez died on April 17, 2014, at home in Mexico City following complications from pneumonia; he was 87. This narrative prospective is there so you feel bad for Damaso, however he is not respectful of his wife, and instead, is full of himself. That robbery. According to the supervisor, they didnt catch them. Camila: Charro. We are back with Radio Ambulante. His prize was a first edition book from 1967. Like shame, disbelief, alarm, fear. When I try to buy this book theyre going to realize its a first edition.. Camila: Thats the bad part. The SIJIN is right in the middle of downtown Bogot. It was wrong. For all of his accolades and awards, Garcia Marquez never got too comfortable in his success. And you start to feel like a thief, like youre the one whos guilty, because of the interrogation. Press Chief: Major, but the book that was stolen at the last Book Fair? May I speak with the press department of the police, please? And lvaro told him: Edgar: That the book was priceless but the ACLI had to answer for this. Which is to say, it would be nice if all of the cases the police handled where recommended cases and they were just as efficient when they deal with the robbery of an average, ordinary citizen. Having found the book in record time was a victory for the police: only six days after the report was filed. Edgar: I got there to see what was going on. They were about to close the fair and the police never arrived. Also, lvaro was the only person with the keys to the cases. He heard the news on La Lucirnaga. I told him, no, if its on La Lucirnaga theyre just messing with people.. But. lvaro: To ask for the phone number of the person in charge of Telfono Rosa. But I think many of us were left with a lot of questions. Would we be able to do that? And they decided to act. When they get out to run, they hear gunfire. Luca, for example, said this to me: Luca: Well, it doesnt make sense that the police, knowing who was involved, didnt hold anyone accountable for anything, right? According to what the supervisor told me, 50 million pesos. Nothing I did in films was mine. They told us: Alright, listen up. So he thought from now until I get to my house and send the email I will have lost a whole day. And they indicated to us more or less where the guys were going to meet. Let us not trick ourselves into thinking the big books are the only ones worth our time. A sardonic Mexican melodrama from 1964, directed by Alberto Isaac and based on a Gabriel Garcia Marquez story, about a . He said that they had found the book in a box in the neighborhood La Perseverancia, in downtown Bogot. How come they hadnt even filed a complaint? Daniel: Yes, yes, the express buses in Bogot. Language. There was a major, there was a colonel, there was a captain from the Heritage department, there was an officer from the SIJIN and from the DIJIN. He remembers it well. He was at his own bookstore, almost on the other side of the city, in the middle of an event with a writer. Nobody. And it lasted for about half an hour until. Then the guy abandoned the book and they retrieved it at a store. I went out right away, I stood in front of the display case and shouted Edgar!. I dont know. They asked the police in that sector for help. Yes, it will close. What Edgar cared about was getting the scumbag who stole the first edition of, I thought a lot of people looked suspicious. And on top of that, the bookstore was going to be at the exit of the Macondo Pavilion, which was clearly the most important one at the fair. Were very, Translation: There Are No Thieves in This Town. He wanted the whole thing to be over, so early that week he called Consuelo Gaitn, the director of the National Library, and told her: lvaro: Please, I want to make this donation really, really quickly. No one did. David wasnt just in charge of that bookstore, he was also the president of the Association of Independent Booksellers, the ACLI [by its initials in Spanish]. No, she felt it was more important to stick to the agreement they had made with lvaro. That was the first year the invited country was a fictional place: Macondo. But Luca remembered that the agreement was that only lvaro could handle the books. It says: I bought this copy of One Hundred Years of Solitude in Montevideo, Uruguay. What happened?. And then people would be a little more cooperative. What happened?. The next day a friend went to visit him at the fair and lvaro told him about the robbery. Gabriel Garca Mrquez Biography, Next In this context it means something like ridiculous. 82. Its called NPR One and it offers the best from public radio and beyond. We are calling from who knows where, who knows where. They called me from Mexico, Argentina, Europe, France, Spain. So he said ah well, Ill sell it to you for six dollars. The first question they asked him was, how do you feel now? And lvaro answered: lvaro: Right now I feel different because I realized that this didnt just happen to me, it happened to all of Colombia. It was in Uruguay. But what caught my attention was that there were slightly different versions of where the book had been found. On a day like today, my master William Faulkner said 'I decline to accept the end of man.' A lot of people found that absurd. lvaro: This book doesnt belong to me anymore. Camila: Because he got him old books. He held a press conference just to talk about the incident. The one he had loaned the book to. There was a very diligent group of police. Camila: According to what the supervisor told me, 50 million pesos. And as soon as I got there Luca told me weve been robbed. This contradicts the title. City of Thieves. It was rush hour on a Friday and the traffic was really backed up. I hold the rank of supervisor. lvaro: So I went to the restroom, I peed, I took a breath and wiped the sweat off my forehead. lvaros bookstore, San Librario, also had a stand at the fair. A first edition copy of. Because that creates insecurity. Supervisor: At that point we organized ourselves and got in three cars. And later he said no, librovejero as in ropavejero [book peddler, as in junk peddler]. Camila: And, Daniel, do you know what Transmilenio is? So it occurred to him to call a journalist friend who worked at. They said they had found out that someone had the book and that this person had set up a meeting with a possible buyer. Camila: I know, he talks really fast, its almost like he doesnt even stop to breathe. They didnt give lvaro a lot of details either. That was the version I heard, the version that was in the press. Then there are gems like "There Are No Thieves in This Town" and "One of These Days," a story that, although it spans only a few pages, is near perfect in its construction. Supervisor: And they indicated to us more or less where the guys were going to meet. He didnt give a lot of details about how the operation went. And lvaro was a secondhand book collector. Gabriel Garcia Marquez and I have a few things in common: We both discovered Kafka while studying in Bogot, and we both knew we wanted to write forever after borrowing copies of The Metamorphosis. Exactly. But he hadnt even thought about the media. lvaro: They put out an all-points bulletin and somehow discovered I dont know how that the book was going to be taken out of the country. And what it meant for the whole country. lvaro: Now that I think about it, it really was a flimsy lock. There was another girl who started crying, another bookseller, for no apparent reason because she didnt have anything to do with what was happening, but it was just seeing all of the commotion. She told him that she was going to write the story herself and send it to eltiempo.com. What the loss of this book meant to the country. I was almost expecting him to start cursing and shouting and get violent. But if they capture one person and two people tried to sell the book and the third person is the buyer, itll close the day all three are caught. And when David told him that, lvaro. Which means the news wouldnt come out for another seven days. Until finally in April 2016 they gave me an appointment to meet with the lieutenant in charge of the case. Not even me. The last few sentences are more than telling. And lvaros book was on display along with others from his private collection, in an exhibit inside a bookstore that David was running. Its unbelievable. If I had known, I would have started writing a long time ago." An officer met me and brought me to a small office filled with empty cubicles. Instead I said, yes, of course.. In April of this year, 2016, almost a year after his book was recovered, lvaro got some news from the attorney generals office. lvaro started taking them out and throwing them on the desk. Edgar: To open their bags. They questioned and doubted everything I said. If they had bags from another store, we asked them to open them. I went out right away, I stood in front of the display case and shouted Edgar!. Edgar: I ran to the door and told the security guards that from that moment on no one could leave without being searched. Eight police officers went. For instance, people started coming up with really crazy and sometimes very disrespectful theories. Camila: Well, it may be a stretch to say everyone, but certainly Im not exaggerating when I say that Gabo is one of Colombias cultural heroes. On social media you could read things like: Thats why this country is backwards. Edgar: He tells me, the police are coming now so you can file a report. But not just any copy. Not at all. So much so that he didnt even ask Luca for many details. So I went to the SIJN offices. And I started at the most obvious place: The National Police. NPR One joins you this Thanksgiving while you travel or wait in line or wait for a friend. David wasnt just in charge of that bookstore, he was also the president of the Association of Independent Booksellers, the ACLI [by its initials in Spanish]. David: Well, I was totally happy And scared. The 1975 film The Legend of Lizzie Borden was an example of this. The right thing to do was to call him and tell him myself because I was the person he had loaned the books to. Two booksellers from Bogot. Thanks to Gustavo Martnez for his help. lvaro told Edgar that he was going to take the rest of the books and told him to bring a box. Camila: They arrived at the police station and the chief of police, Palomino. And on Saturday, May 2nd, the day the book was stolen and just three days before the end of the fair, about 73 thousand people went to the event. What is really important and what I take away from all this extends beyond the book. They say that they are meeting on a foot bridge near the neighborhood. But they didnt, When David found out that the story was already all over the media, he got fair security on the phone, a retired colonel. And today I want to tell you the story of that book. Im calling David. I was in total disbelief. It was rush hour on a Friday and the traffic was really backed up. Memory Changes. No one argues for his freedom. This is what he told me: Supervisor: No, the investigation is still ongoing. Yes, those. How may I help you? Im an investigator with SIJINs anti-theft group. Not knowing what he was going to do, Edgar put the box in storage and ordered that no one touch it. agitated (adjective) feeling or appearing troubled or nervous. There are no ghosts, no gypsies. I followed people who walked past me up to the door before they could leave and I asked them to open their bags. But Luca is the kind of person who almost never calls. I mean, yes, the book was found and everything was well and good. The book was found! And I said, but how could the book be found without anyone telling me? And all of a sudden my phone rings. The books on display. One day, before the start of the fair, when they were setting up the bookstore, lvaro came with his books and arranged them himself. He heard the news on, is a radio show where they talk about national news. And today I want to tell you the story of that book. Dozens of national and international media outlets continued to call lvaro and David. No One Writes to the Colonel is published in Colombia. Camila: Some of the eight police officers went after the men. Garca Mrquez says that he again began writing, "straight off without a break, and afterwards made a great many corrections on the manuscript, made copies, and corrected it again." Lupa is our new app for Spanish learners who want to study with Radio Ambulantes stories. They threw the box and started running.. And this supervisor spends his time walking through downtown Bogot because thats where most robberies happen. Barely a sheet of paper. I could tell that it was deeply painful for him because his eyes were watering and his mouth was trembling. Camila: This is the vice-attorney general at the time, Juan Vicente Valbuena. Completely empty. Supervisor: It was around 8:30, 9:00 in the morning. And when David told him that, lvaro. But before he left he asked to use their restroom. Im Daniel Alarcn. Paint is peeling off the walls and sometimes you get the feeling that the building is abandoned. How long were they at it? Its shrink-wrapped No, not that one. Camila: As soon as he got off the phone with the police, he called David. But we have to close this circle with the capture of those responsible. One of them is The Golden Cock. I was laughing at that point. lvaro told me that the squad car was driving at full speed down the Transmilenio lane to avoid traffic.
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