
Gabriel García Márquez Books
Robert A. Caro is an American journalist and biographer known for his meticulous research and narrative style.
Known for: 100 Years of Solitude, Love in the Time of Cholera, One Hundred Years of Solitude, Chronicle of a Death Foretold, In Evil Hour, Leaf Storm, Memories of My Melancholy Whores, No One Writes to the Colonel, The Autumn of the Patriarch, The General In His Labyrinth
Books by Gabriel García Márquez

100 Years of Solitude
Means of Ascent is the second volume in Robert A. Caro’s monumental biography of Lyndon B. Johnson. It chronicles Johnson’s life from 1941 to 1948, focusing on his controversial 1948 Senate campaign a...

Love in the Time of Cholera
Gabriel García Márquez’s Love in the Time of Cholera is a sweeping meditation on desire, memory, aging, and the stubborn endurance of hope. Set in a lush Caribbean port city over the course of more th...

One Hundred Years of Solitude
Gabriel García Márquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude is one of the defining novels of the twentieth century: a sweeping, dreamlike chronicle of the Buendía family across generations in the mythical ...

Chronicle of a Death Foretold
Chronicle of a Death Foretold is a short novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel García Márquez. Set in a small Colombian town, it reconstructs the events surrounding the murder of Santiago Nasar,...

In Evil Hour
Set in a small Colombian town after a civil war, anonymous pamphlets begin to circulate, exposing the private secrets of its residents. These writings trigger a wave of violence and paranoia, revealin...

Leaf Storm
Leaf Storm is a novella by Colombian author Gabriel García Márquez, first published in 1955. Set in the fictional town of Macondo, the story unfolds through the perspectives of three generations—a col...

Memories of My Melancholy Whores
Memories of My Melancholy Whores is a novella by Gabriel García Márquez, first published in Spanish in 2004 and translated into English by Edith Grossman. The story follows a ninety-year-old journalis...

No One Writes to the Colonel
This short novel tells the story of a retired colonel who patiently and with dignity awaits a government pension that never arrives. Set in a small Colombian town, it explores themes of poverty, hope,...

The Autumn of the Patriarch
First published in 1975, 'The Autumn of the Patriarch' is a masterful work of magical realism that portrays the solitude and corruption of absolute power through the life of a Caribbean dictator. With...

The General In His Labyrinth
The General in His Labyrinth is a 1989 historical novel by Colombian Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez. It offers a fictionalized account of the last days of Simón Bolívar, the Liberator of South ...
Key Insights from Gabriel García Márquez
Johnson’s Early Congressional Years
When Lyndon Johnson entered the House of Representatives, he already understood that proximity to power mattered more than ideology. I followed him through his early years, observing how deftly he navigated the corridors of influence. He cultivated relationships with figures who could open doors—the...
From 100 Years of Solitude
The Role of Lady Bird Johnson
No account of Lyndon Johnson’s ascent can be complete without Lady Bird. Her devotion was quiet but decisive; she embodied stability in a life otherwise consumed by turbulence. Through my research and interviews, I discovered how deeply Lyndon relied on her—not merely as wife but as financier, confi...
From 100 Years of Solitude
Love changes shape across a lifetime
One of the novel’s most unsettling and beautiful insights is that love does not remain pure by staying unchanged; it survives by transforming. At the heart of Love in the Time of Cholera is the long emotional arc connecting Florentino Ariza and Fermina Daza, from youthful obsession to old-age compan...
From Love in the Time of Cholera
Obsession can imitate devotion
A troubling question runs through the novel: when does unwavering love become self-centered obsession? Florentino Ariza sees himself as a man of eternal fidelity, someone uniquely capable of waiting for Fermina Daza across half a century. On one level, his persistence appears romantic, even heroic. ...
From Love in the Time of Cholera
Marriage is built in ordinary time
Passion may ignite love stories, but Márquez shows that marriages are usually made in routines, irritations, negotiations, and repeated acts of care. The relationship between Fermina Daza and Dr. Juvenal Urbino is one of the novel’s richest achievements because it avoids both cynicism and idealizati...
From Love in the Time of Cholera
Time reveals hidden truths about desire
The novel insists that time is not just a background condition; it is an active force that exposes what people truly want. In youth, emotions often appear absolute. Florentino believes his love for Fermina is destiny. Fermina believes she understands what kind of life she should choose. Juvenal Urbi...
From Love in the Time of Cholera
About Gabriel García Márquez
Robert A. Caro is an American journalist and biographer known for his meticulous research and narrative style. He has won multiple Pulitzer Prizes and National Book Awards for his works, including The Power Broker and The Years of Lyndon Johnson series.
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Robert A. Caro is an American journalist and biographer known for his meticulous research and narrative style.
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