At least in the book, you have the family tree at the front to consult ... with all the money to ensure that Macondo looks most handsome, and with the spirit of Marquez (or his family) hovering ...
There are classic opening lines from books, and then there is the first sentence in “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” the 1967 ...
Makers could have used them as a shorthand for the triumphs and tragedies of the ill-fated Buendía family. That most of ... and Buendía calls the place Macondo after a dream.
The cycles of time, the endless loop of beginnings and endings, reminded me of Nietzsche’s eternal recurrence, the whirling ...
Rewind 399 pages, and Macondo, the future lost utopia ... overcome the broken state of human affairs. We know from the family tree at the very beginning of the novel that the Buendias will ...
In a short time, man will be able to see what is happening anywhere in the world without leaving his own house,” the gypsy chief Melquiades prophesies to the settlers ...
For the holidays, I took a break from K-dramas to watch the screen adaptation of one of my favorite novels, Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s “One Hundred Years of Solitude.” ...
Aside from winning the Golden Globe for for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in Any Motion Picture, Zoe ...
The Netflix 16-episodic series One Hundred Years of Solitude Part 1 is now available to stream. The series opens by ...
Set in the make-believe Colombian town of Macondo from the early 1800s onwards ... that there’s famously a family tree printed at the front of the book. And yet, here we are.