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Cien años de soledad

Cien años de soledad

Gabriel García Márquez

4.12
1,110,127 valoraciones·59,663 reseñas

Considerada la obra cumbre de Gabriel García Márquez, Cien años de soledad narra la saga de la familia Buendía a lo largo de siete generaciones en el mítico pueblo de Macondo. Una novela imprescindible, llena de personajes inolvidables, humor, tristeza y una profunda reflexión sobre el destino y la...

páginas
417
Format
Mass Market Paperback
Publicado
2003-06-24
Editorial
Harper

Sobre el autor

Gabriel García Márquez
Gabriel García Márquez

4 libros · 0 seguidores

Gabriel José de la Concordia Garcí­a Márquezwas a Colombian novelist, short-story writer, screenwriter and journalist. Garcí­a Márquez, familiarly known as "Gabo" in his native country, was considered one of the most significant authors of the 20th century. In 1982, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.He studi...

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Calificación y Reseña

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Reseñas de la comunidad

59,663 reseñas
4.1
1,110,127 valoraciones
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
emma
emma·5 years ago
welcome to...ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF AUGUSTUDE!while logically i know that is far from my best month / title pun, and is also actually among the worst, and in point of fact that's even worse than it sounds because my puns have never been good...i like it. and that's that.we are back for another exciting round of Project Long Classics, in which elle and i find it within our cowardly hearts to brave long books from old times only by dividing them up into teeny-tiny chunks for four entire weeks.if it ...
Emma
Emma·5 years ago
"Upset by two nostalgias facing each other like two mirrors, he lost his marvellous sense of unreality and he ended up recommending to all of them that they leave Macondo, that they forget everything he had taught them about the world and the human heart, that they shit on Horace, and that wherever they might be they always remember that the past was a lie, that memory has no return, that every spring gone by could never be recovered, and that the wildest and most tenacious love was an ephemeral...
Lyn
Lyn·10 years ago
*** 2023 reread - In all of world literature there is a division: 1) One Hundred Years of Solitude and 2) all other books.***Mystical and captivating.One Hundred Years of Solitude by Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez, first published in 1967 in his native Colombia and then first published in English in 1970, is a unique literary experience, overwhelming in its virtuosity and magnificent in scope.I recall my review of Tolstoy’s War and Peace, trying to describe a book like it and realizing th...
Lisa
Lisa·11 years ago
"What is your favourite book, mum?" How many times have my children asked me that, growing up with a mother who spends most of her time reading - to them, alone, for work, for pleasure - or looking for new books in bookstores wherever we happen to be."I can't answer that, there are so many books I love, and in different ways!""Just name one that comes to mind!"And I said, without really knowing why, and without thinking:"One Hundred Years Of Solitude!""Why?""Because..."This novel taught me that ...
Vit Babenco
Vit Babenco·12 years ago
Years are passing by but time stands still – such is a perception of solitude… Such is a feeling created by One Hundred Years of Solitude novel…A myth, legend, fable, allegory, chronicle, epopee, saga, fairytale – call it as you please but magical realism applied by Gabriel García Márquez to his narration encompasses all those.Remedios the Beauty was proclaimed queen. Úrsula, who shuddered at the disquieting beauty of her great-granddaughter, could not prevent the choice. Until then she had succ...
s.penkevich [hiatus-will return-miss you all]
s.penkevich [hiatus-will return-miss you all]·14 years ago
‘It's enough for me to be sure that you and I exist at this moment.’Few memories of reading a book can match the sweetness of the warm spring day while at university when I sat in the grass down by a river and began Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s masterful One Hundred Years of Solitude. The novel gripped me immediately and I followed the myth-like tales of the Buendía family and the fictional town of Macondo across multiple generations until the sunlight had vanished, the sound of the river adding an ...
Meg Sherman
Meg Sherman·17 years ago
I guarantee that 95% of you will hate this book, and at least 70% of you will hate it enough to not finish it, but I loved it. Guess I was just in the mood for it. Here's how it breaks down:AMAZING THINGS: I can literally feel new wrinkles spreading across the surface of my brain when I read this guy. He's so wicked smart that there's no chance he's completely sane. His adjectives and descriptions are 100% PERFECT, and yet entirely nonsensical. After reading three chapters, it starts making sens...
Laura
Laura·17 years ago
More like A Hundred Years of Torture. I read this partly in a misguided attempt to expand my literary horizons and partly because my uncle was a big fan of Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Then again, he also used to re-read Ulysses for fun, which just goes to show that you should never take book advice from someone whose IQ is more than 30 points higher than your own.I have patience for a lot of excesses, like verbiage and chocolate, but not for 5000 pages featuring three generations of people with the ...
Chris
Chris·18 years ago
Revised 28 March 2012Huh? Oh. Oh, man. Wow.I just had the weirdest dream.There was this little town, right? And everybody had, like, the same two names. And there was this guy who lived under a tree and a lady who ate dirt and some other guy who just made little gold fishes all the time. And sometimes it rained and sometimes it didn’t, and… and there were fire ants everywhere, and some girl got carried off into the sky by her laundry…Wow. That was messed up.I need some coffee.The was roughly ho...
Adam
Adam·18 years ago
So I know that I'm supposed to like this book because it is a classic and by the same author who wrote Love in the Time of Cholera. Unfortunately, I just think it is unbelievably boring with a jagged plot that seems interminable. Sure, the language is interesting and the first line is the stuff of University English courses. Sometimes I think books get tagged with the "classic" label because some academics read them and didn't understand and so they hailed these books as genius. These same acade...