One Hundred Years of Solitude

hardcover, 416 pages

English language

Published Aug. 31, 1995 by Gardners Books, imusti.

ISBN:
978-1-85715-223-4
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It´s the best work of García Márquez. A novel that narrates the vicisitudes of Aureliano Buendía in the mythic Macondo, a town in some unknown region of Colombia. This novel was written in the magic realism ("realismo mágico") by García Márquez, a style that mix together amazing elements taken by fiction and realkity.

63 editions

Kreislauf

Das Buch hat mir Rich in Chicago vor 25 Jahren geschenkt, sein Lieblingsbuch. Ich habe 25 Jahre und eine Reise nach Südamerika gebraucht, um es zu lesen.

Der bekannteste Roman aus Südamerika und im Genre „Magischer Realismus“. Die Geschichte der Familie Buendía im Dorf Macondo ist ein sich durch die Generationen wiederholender Kreislauf – viele Motive und Themen, die sich durch die Geschichte Lateinamerikas hindurchziehen.

Ich habe mich damit eher schwr getan, deutlich besser gefallen im Genre hat mir da das Geisterhaus von Isabel Allende.

A whole goddamn masterpiece

I’m not sure why I chose to pick up One Hundred Years of Solitude this year. I’ve a running list of classic literature that I incorporate into my regular reading. Primarily to compensate for my lack of education, but also because I enjoy understanding cultural references in art that have had an impact on society and culture. Marquez’s novel, widely considered one of the most important works of the 20th century and a preeminent example of the Latin American Boom, definitely qualifies as impactful, and it’s been on my ‘to read’ list for years.

Often, when I read classic lit, I end up finishing it out of obligation. I appreciate the art form and recognize that literature isn’t necessarily made for “the masses” to enjoy. So, even though I’m comfortable not finishing contemporary or genre fiction that doesn’t spark my interest, I’ll push through on the classics because it’s …

Review of 'Hundert Jahre Einsamkeit' on 'Goodreads'

The old man waited. Rain. Years. The colonel waited. Rain. No bananas. The women wept. The ghost. The beauty. The solitude. Love and death. All mixed up. Like the river. Muddy.

That's it.

A superb reading experience

I have had One Hundred Years Of Solitude on my kindle for nearly a year now, since I enjoyed losing myself in my first Gabriel Garcia Marquez novel, Love In The Time Of Cholera. One Hundred Years is equally as immersive a novel which tells the story of a remote South American village from its inception to its happy years, on through a nationwide civil war, to its near destruction by greedy white industralists, and through years of constant monsoon-like deluge. I love the huge scale of the story, especially as it is contained within a single small village and, a lot of the time, in one large house.

The extended Buendia family are the central pivot and their matriarch, Ursula, is a great character. She sees several generations live and die, stay near or travel away, and all named for the generation before which leads to incredible potential …

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