WEBVTT 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 One day in 1965, while driving to Acapulco for a vacation with his family, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Colombian journalist Gabriel García Márquez abruptly turned his car around, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 asked his wife to take care of the family’s finances for the coming months, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and returned home. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 The beginning of a new book had suddenly come to him: 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 “Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 when his father took him to discover ice.” 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Over the next eighteen months, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 those words would blossom into One Hundred Years of Solitude. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 A novel that would go on to bring Latin American literature 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 to the forefront of the global imagination, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 earning García Márquez the 1982 Nobel Prize for Literature. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 What makes One Hundred Years of Solitude so remarkable? 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 The novel chronicles the fortunes and misfortunes 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 of the Buendía family over seven generations. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 With its lush, detailed sentences, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 arge cast of characters, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and tangled narrative, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 100 Years of Solitude is not an easy book to read. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But it’s a deeply rewarding one, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 with an epic assortment of intense romances, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 civil war, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 political intrigue, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 globe-trotting adventurers, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and more characters named Aureliano than you’d think possible. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Yet this is no mere historical drama. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 One Hundred Years of Solitude is one of the most famous examples 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 of a literary genre known as magical realism. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Here, supernatural events or abilities 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 are described in a realistic and matter-of-fact tone, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 while the real events of human life and history 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 reveal themselves to be full of fantastical absurdity. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Surreal phenomena within the fictional village of Macondo 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 intertwine seamlessly with events taking place in the real country of Colombia. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 The settlement begins in a mythical state of isolation 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but is gradually exposed to the outside world, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 facing multiple calamities along the way. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 As years pass, characters grow old and die, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 only to return as ghosts, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 or to be seemingly reincarnated in the next generation. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 When the American fruit company comes to town, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 so does a romantic mechanic who is always followed by yellow butterflies. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 A young woman up and floats away