I was in a bookstore yesterday looking for signed editions. It is kind of my latest obsession. I try to sell them on my ebay store, but part of me is just fine with keeping them. Anyway I was looking for books by Oscar Hijuelos. He won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1990 (the first Hispanic writer to do so) for The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love. It wa later adapted into a movie starring Armand Assante and Antonio Banderas. The movie didn't quite capture the book. They rarely do.
I loved the book. I read some of his other books, like Our House in the Last World and Mr. Ives' Christmas. But as with other authors I really admired like Tom Robbins, I lost track of his work (mainly because I stopped reading much). So I was looking for his books in the book store hoping to find a signed one but there was nothing. I asked ChatGPT if he was still alive and it informed me he died in 2013 at age 62 after suffering a heart attack while playing tennis in Manhattan.
And just like that another of my favorite authors was gone without me having a clue. I felt this same loss that I felt when I learned Tom Robbins was dead. When I found out he was dead I started looking for signed editions by him and got one. It was kind of my way of having something he'd touched in my life.
I started looking for signed Oscar Hijuelos books on ebay and I was kind of shocked at how low the prices were. I was assuming that since he had passed and wouldn't be signing any more the things were be worth alot. Apparently not. It is like everything in life. New generations come along and they sprint past the past to their own futures. So Tom Robbins and Oscar Hijuelos mean little to current generations. I imagine it is the same with Hunter Thompson and Douglas Adams.
But still, they left behind amazing books that will continue to amaze...if someone bothers to look for them.











































