Pedro Paramo by Juan Rulfo
Theodoros Kafantaris
Published on July 08, 2026
Introduction
Juan Preciado travels to Comala to find his father, Pedro Paramo, at his dying mother's request. He discovers a ghost town—literally: every person he meets is dead. The voices of the past speak through the walls. Time dissolves. Juan Rulfo's Pedro Paramo (1955) is barely 120 pages, but its influence is incalculable. Gabriel Garcia Marquez claimed he knew the entire book by heart and that it showed him how to write One Hundred Years of Solitude.
The Tyrant and the Land
Pedro Paramo is one of literature's great villains: a landowner who destroys everything he touches through greed, lust, and violence. But Rulfo makes him strangely pitiable—a man who loved once and spent his life destroying everything because he could not have that love returned. The novel's fragmented structure, shifting between living and dead, past and present, is essential to its meaning: in Comala, history is not linear but simultaneous.
Key Takeaways
- The dead speak through the living
- Magical realism begins here
- Violence leaves a permanent scar on the land