Beginning and first major works Vargas Llosa's first novel,
The Time of the Hero (''''), was published in 1963. The book is set among a community of cadets in a Lima military school, and the plot is based on the author's own experiences at Lima's
Leoncio Prado Military Academy. This early piece gained wide public attention and immediate success. Its vitality and adept use of sophisticated literary techniques immediately impressed critics, and it won the
Premio de la Crítica Española award. This novel, alone, accumulated enough awards to place the author among the leading figures of the
Latin American Boom. Indeed, Latin Americanist literary critic
Gerald Martin suggests that
The Green House is "one of the greatest novels to have emerged from Latin America". Vargas Llosa's third novel,
Conversation in The Cathedral (''''), was published in 1969, when he was 33. This ambitious narrative is the story of Santiago Zavala, the son of a government minister, and Ambrosio, his chauffeur. A random meeting at a
dog pound leads the pair to a riveting conversation at a nearby bar known as "The Cathedral". During the encounter, Zavala searches for the truth about his father's role in the murder of a notorious Peruvian underworld figure, shedding light on the workings of a dictatorship along the way. Unfortunately for Zavala, his quest results in a dead end with no answers and no sign of a better future. The novel attacks the dictatorial government of Odría by showing how a dictatorship controls and destroys lives.
1970s and the "discovery of humor" In 1971, Vargas Llosa published
García Márquez: Story of a Deicide (''''), which was his doctoral thesis for the Complutense University of Madrid. Although Vargas Llosa wrote this book-length study about his then friend, the Colombian
Nobel laureate writer Gabriel García Márquez, they did not speak to each other again. In 1976, Vargas Llosa punched García Márquez in the face at the
Palacio de Bellas Artes in
Mexico City, ending the friendship. Neither writer publicly stated the underlying reasons for the quarrel. According to Guillermo Angulo, a mutual friend of García Marquez and Vargas Llosa, the punch happened because Vargas Llosa had left his wife in Spain for a "very beautiful woman." After that fledgling romance faltered, Vargas Llosa returned to his wife, who then told Vargas Llosa that García Marquez had in fact had tried to gain her affections during the time he had left her. A photograph of García Márquez sporting a black eye was published in 2007, reigniting public interest in the feud. Despite the decades of silence, in 2007, Vargas Llosa agreed to allow part of his book to be used as the introduction to a 40th-anniversary edition of García Márquez's
One Hundred Years of Solitude, which was re-released in Spain and throughout Latin America that year.
Historia de un Deicidio was also reissued in that year, as part of Vargas Llosa's complete works. Following the monumental work
Conversation in The Cathedral, Vargas Llosa's output shifted away from more serious themes such as politics and problems with society. Raymond L. Williams, a scholar of Latin American literature, describes this phase in his writing career as "the discovery of humor". His first attempt at a satirical novel was
Captain and the Special Service (''''), published in 1973. This short, comic novel offers vignettes of dialogues and documents about the Peruvian armed forces and a corps of prostitutes assigned to visit military outposts in remote jungle areas. These plot elements are similar to Vargas Llosa's earlier novel
The Green House, but in a different form.
Captain and the Special Service is, therefore, essentially a parody of both
The Green House and the literary approach that novel represents. From 1974 to 1987, Vargas Llosa focused on his writing, but also took the time to pursue other endeavours. In 1975, he co-directed an unsuccessful motion-picture adaptation of his novel,
Captain and the Secret Service. In 1977, Vargas Llosa was elected as a member of the
Peruvian Academy of Language. That year, he also published
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter ('
), based in part on his marriage to his first wife, Julia Urquidi, to whom he dedicated the novel. She later wrote a memoir, ' (''What Little Vargas Didn't Say''), in which she gives her personal account of their relationship. She states that Vargas Llosa's account exaggerates many negative points in their courtship and marriage while minimizing her role of assisting his literary career.
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter is considered one of the most striking examples of how the language and imagery of popular culture can be used in literature. The novel was adapted in 1990 into a Hollywood feature film,
Tune in Tomorrow.
Later novels Vargas Llosa's fourth major novel,
The War of the End of the World (''''), was published in 1981 and was his first attempt at a historical novel. This work initiated a radical change in Vargas Llosa's style towards themes such as
messianism and irrational human behaviour. It recreates the
War of Canudos, an incident in 19th-century Brazil in which an armed
millenarian cult held off a siege by the national army for months. As in Vargas Llosa's earliest work, this novel carries a sober and serious theme, and its tone is dark. Because of the book's ambition and execution, critics have argued that this is one of Vargas Llosa's greatest literary pieces. The book was also criticized as revolutionary and anti-
socialist. After completing
The War of the End of the World, Vargas Llosa began to write novels that were significantly shorter than many of his earlier books. In 1983, he finished
The Real Life of Alejandro Mayta ('''', 1984). The commission's main purpose was to investigate the murders to provide information regarding the incident to the public. Following his involvement with the Investigatory Commission, Vargas Llosa published a series of articles to defend his position in the affair. The experience also inspired one of Vargas Llosa's later novels,
Death in the Andes (''''), originally published in 1993 in Barcelona. It was almost 20 years before Vargas Llosa wrote another major work:
The Feast of the Goat (''''), a
political thriller, was published in 2000 (and in English in 2001). According to Williams, it is Vargas Llosa's most complete and most ambitious novel since
The War of the End of the World. Critic Sabine Koellmann sees it in the line of his earlier novels such as
Conversation in The Cathedral depicting the effects of authoritarianism, violence and the abuse of power on the individual. Based on the dictatorship of
Rafael Trujillo, who governed the
Dominican Republic from 1930 until his assassination in 1961, the novel has three main strands: one concerns Urania Cabral, the daughter of a former politician and Trujillo loyalist, who returns for the first time since leaving the Dominican Republic after Trujillo's assassination 30 years earlier; the second concentrates on the assassination itself, the conspirators who carry it out, and its consequences; and the third and final strand deals with Trujillo himself in scenes from the end of his regime. and is regarded as one of Vargas Llosa's best works. In Vargas Llosa's version, the plot relates the decades-long obsession of its narrator, a Peruvian expatriate in Paris, with a woman with whom he first fell in love when both were teenagers. In 2019 he published the novel
Harsh Times ('
), about the 1954 coup in Guatemala. In 2023, Vargas Llosa announced that he would publish his final novel, ' (
I Give You My Silence), and retire. ==Political career==