The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor
The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor is a
novel by
Gabriel Garcia Marquez. In it, he undertakes a debate concerning a posible, but not necessary, moral reversion to a primitive, instinctual existence in the face of a sea catastrophy and consequent shipwreck and solitude. This theme has been explored previously by
Daniel Defoe (
Robinson Crusoe) and
Voltaire (
Candide), and more recently by
William Golding (
Lord of the Flies),
Umberto Eco (
The Island of the Day Before), Joseph Michael Coetzee (
Foe),
Jose Saramago (
The Stone Raft and
The Tale of the Uknown Island) and possibly many others.