Much of the initial critical reception of One Hundred Years of Solitude suggests parallels between the novel and the Old Testament (specifically the Pentateuch, the first five books thereof). It is an obvious source because the myths are widely known to Western readers. However, steadfast adherence to Biblical versions of creation, flight, and destruction in certain later critical interpretations of One Hundred Years of Solitude may have resulted in circuitous or needlessly cryptic interpretations. We may best consider this initial phase of analysis as a reasonable start, but not definitive or conclusive, and then propose other meaningful sources which may yield clearer, more precise parallels, which could be then be relied upon for a more expansive interpretation. We view One Hundred Years of Solitude as a distinct work, specific to the Americas; therefore, it may be considered in the light of the known history of the American continents, including pre-Hispanic history, myth and ritual. We may be remiss in examining such a novel only within a zone of canonical security. We may also consider that we, who are peoples of the American continents, are largely responsible for a lingering colonial mentality which rejects our mixed origins in favour of a false mimetic Europeanized identity, and that as a result we may have missed that precise criticism in the novel in our quest for understanding, by overlooking the novel's apparently non- Western symbolism.The first well-known critical review of One Hundred Years was penned by Reinaldo Arenas in 1968. It sets the tone for other scholarship on the novel by addressing its mythological qualities as follows: En gran medida, Cien anos de soledad esta enmarcada dentro de una concepcion biblica, comenzando, como es logico, por el surgimiento del mundo (Macondo, el pueblo imaginario, escenario donde se han desarrollado todas las novelas y relatos de Gabriel Garcia Marquez), pasando luego por el diluvio, los vientos profeticos, las plagas, las guerras y las variadas calamidades que azotan (y azotaran) al hombre, culminando, desde luego, con el Apocalipsis.1 The statement is logical, drawing apparent parallels between an ancient text and a modern one. We may contend that in terms of a book review this essay is brilliant and meditative, and it is an invitation ab initio to critics to investigate Arenas' terms of reference more thoroughly, perhaps exhaustively. We may contend that Arenas' review is canonical, and that his prima facie conclusions were investigated thoroughly. Further criticism, while delving into the question of mythological origins, suggests that the Biblical parallels drawn by Arenas are more tenuous than they initially appeared to be. The closer one looks at the two texts, the less similar they appear to be.In Claves simbolicas de Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Graciela Maturo states that Tres son los principales temas biblicos de Garcia Marquez: la Creacion, la historia de los Patriarcas y el Apocalipsis de San Juan (151). Maturo's point about creation is examined in depth by German Carrillo, perhaps more emphatically as he states that Lo que mas parece llamar la atencion de un lector asiduo de Cien anos de soledad... es el no poco numero de alusiones y comparaciones... entre los Buendia de Macondo y Adan en el Paraiso. La primera esta justamente en el tercer renglon de la primera pagina.... Es el universo adanico, abundante en riquezas.... lugar en donde los Buendia, como Adan, participan del prodigio de la Creacion con la prerrogativa de dar nombre a las cosas que les rodean (Carrillo 22). We are confronted by similes, prefaced by the fact that to a great degree our main source of comparative myth is Biblical. There is an insistence that the source is precise, yet at the same moment it is a tacit admission that closer scrutiny yields very little, and we are left slightly adrift.The tenuousness of Arenas' initial classification of the mythical framework of One Hundred Years becomes more apparent in Ricardo Gullon's examination of the character of Melquiades: Las figuras del mito, miticas han de ser: Melquiades ante todo. …