Where to Buy
Affiliate links coming soon. Purchases will help support this project.
Men of Maize / El Señor Presidente
7Miguel Ángel Asturias
Asturias's Guatemalan novels — Maya mythology fused with political nightmare; the pioneering works of magical realism that predated García Márquez and won the 1967 Nobel.
GBM Assessment (Score: 7/10)
Men of Maize and El Señor Presidente are pioneering works of magical realism, a literary mode Miguel Ángel Asturias developed years before Gabriel García Márquez brought it to worldwide fame. His novels weave Maya mythology and the harsh realities of Guatemalan dictatorship into narratives that blur the boundaries between the magical and the political. Men of Maize celebrates indigenous culture through a mythic lens, while El Señor Presidente offers a searing portrait of life under authoritarian rule. Asturias received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1967.
Writing from the experience of Central American dictatorship, Asturias drew on his deep knowledge of Maya culture and his firsthand witness of political repression in Guatemala. His fusion of indigenous mythological traditions with European surrealism anticipated the Latin American literary Boom and established a template that would shape the continent's fiction for decades to come.
Awards & Adaptations
NOBEL 1967. Magical realism pioneer.
Recommended Edition
Gerald Martin trans. (1993 - exception)