How Gabriel García Márquez Brought ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’ to Life




By the mid-1960s, erstwhile journalist Gabriel García Márquez had carved out a respectable professional career in Mexico City after years of itinerancy.

A job writing copy for a prominent advertising agency enabled him to properly care for his wife Mercedes and their two young children. Meanwhile, a successful side career of screenwriting was also bearing fruit, with multiple projects in production.

Yet Gabo, as he was known to friends and family, was profoundly unfulfilled. His four published novels had earned some fans in Spanish-speaking areas of the world but sold modestly. And the story he really wanted to tell, based on his recollections of growing up in the tiny coastal town of Aracataca, Colombia, was still gestating in his mind after two decades of starts and stops.

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