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الجمعة، 8 أبريل 2011

One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel García Márquez


One Hundred Years of Solitude  
100years.jpg
First edition
AuthorGabriel García Márquez
Original titleCien años de soledad
TranslatorGregory Rabassa
CountryColombia
LanguageSpanish
Genre(s)Novel
ISBNISBN 0-224-61853-9 (UK hardback edition)
OCLC Number17522865

One Hundred Years of Solitude (Spanish: Cien años de soledad, 1967), by Gabriel García Márquez, is a novel which tells the multi-generational story of the Buendía Family, whose patriarch, José Arcadio Buendía, founds the town of Macondo, the metaphoric Colombia. The non-linear story is narrated via different time frames, a technique derived from the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges (as in The Garden of Forking Paths).
The widely acclaimed story, considered to be the author's masterpiece, was first published in Spanish in 1967, and subsequently has been translated into thirty-seven languages, selling more than 20 million copies.[1][2] The magical realist style and thematic substance of One Hundred Years of Solitude established it as an important, representative novel of the literary Latin American Boom of the 1960s and 1970s,[3] that was stylistically influenced by Modernism (European and North American), and the Cuban Vanguardia (Vanguard) literary movement.

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