One Hundred Years of Solitude (in Spanish: Cien años de soledad), a novel by Gabriel Garcia Marchez, published in 1967, printed nearly thirty million copies, and translated into thirty languages [1] and written by Marketh in 1965 in Mexico. Two years later, Souda Americana published in Argentina eight thousand copies. This novel is considered one of the most important Spanish-American works in particular, and among the most important international literary works. One hundred years of isolation is one of the most widely read and translated novels of other languages. The writer tells the events of the city through the biography of the Buindia family for six generations who live in a fictional village called Macondo, and many of their children are called in the novel by this name.
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