Loading profile…
Loading profile…
Book
Gabriel García Márquez · 1967
A multigenerational saga of the Buendía family in the fictional town of Macondo, blending magical realism with the cyclical nature of human experience and solitude. García Márquez's masterwork traces the rise and fall of a family across generations with lyrical, imaginative prose.
Sequence ladder
Narrative Intelligence sources live outside the figurative image sequence ladder. Adaptive placement applies to image sequences, not this reading library.
Appears in
What this book knows
Solitude is the Buendía family's inheritance and doom — passed down through blood, repeated across generations until time itself collapses.
self-and-identity
That drawing closer together of two solitary people of the same blood separated and united them at the same time.
OHYS-RC-300Seeing him lost in the labyrinths of kinship, the priest asked compassionately what his name was. 'Aureliano Buendía,' he said.
OHYS-RC-329mortality
He stopped selling the little gold fishes when he found out people were buying them not as jewelry but as historic relics.
OHYS-RC-204Colonel Aureliano Buendía did not put aside the possibility of pleasing them — he seemed enthusiastic with the idea of a new war.
OHYS-RC-141grief
Aureliano Segundo began waking up with a knot in his throat, as if he were repressing a desire to weep.
OHYS-RC-279She had so much interior silence to watch over the life of the house that she was the first to notice Meme's silent tribulation.
OHYS-RC-225Illuminates
6 published passages · book excerpt · research analysis
Reader resonance signals for text sources are not wired to this view yet.