1Q84

Libro 1 e 2. Aprile-settembre

722 pages

Published Nov. 21, 2015 by Einaudi.

ISBN:
978-88-06-22622-0
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (7 reviews)

1984, Tokyo. Aomame è bloccata in un taxi nel traffico. L'autista le suggerisce, come unica soluzione per non mancare all'appuntamento che l'aspetta, di uscire dalla tangenziale utilizzando una scala di emergenza, nascosta e poco frequentata. Ma, sibillino, aggiunge di fare attenzione: "Non si lasci ingannare dalle apparenze. La realtà è sempre una sola". Negli stessi giorni Tengo, un giovane aspirante scrittore dotato di buona tecnica ma povero d'ispirazione, riceve uno strano incarico: un editor senza scrupoli gli chiede di riscrivere il romanzo di un'enigmatica diciassettenne così da candidarlo a un premio letterario. Ma "La crisalide d'aria" è un romanzo fantastico tanto ricco di immaginazione quanto sottilmente inquietante: la descrizione della realtà parallela alla nostra e di piccole creature che si nascondono nel corpo umano come parassiti turbano profondamente Tengo. L'incontro con l'autrice non farà che aumentare la sua vertigine: chi è veramente Fukada Eriko? Intanto Aomame (che pure non è …

11 editions

1Q84

3 stars

1) "Janáček composed his little symphony in 1926. He originally wrote the opening as a fanfare for a gymnastics festival. Aomame imagined 1926 Czechoslovakia: The First World War had ended, and the country was freed from the long rule of the Hapsburg Dynasty. As they enjoyed the peaceful respite visiting central Europe, people drank Pilsner beer in cafés and manufactured handsome light machine guns. Two years earlier, in utter obscurity, Franz Kafka had left the world behind. Soon Hitler would come out of nowhere and gobble up this beautiful little country in the blink of an eye, but at the time no one knew what hardships lay in store for them. This may be the most important proposition revealed by history: 'At the time, no one knew what was coming.'"

2) "I'm here, but I'm not here. I'm in two places at once. It goes against Einstein's theorem, but what …

reviewed 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami

Review of '1Q84' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Every time I read a Murakami book, I promise myself that I'm not going to read another, because they are just so bad. Time passes and eventually someone convinces me that I just have not read the right novel of his yet. Uhg! When will it end!

I finished this book, being left with no point. Almost all questions that developed were left unanswered. When she climbed down the emergency exit, I should have done the same with this book and moved on to something else.

Review of '1Q84' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

When I just started reading the book, someone told me that they thought the story was predictable. I think they were focusing a little too much on the obvious and not enough on the meaning of the metaphors in the book. And the metaphors are out of this world! Only Murakami can throw a curveball after curveball of naughty metaphors at you and NOT sound one bit silly or hokey. Another brilliant book by a brilliant author.

Review of '1Q84' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I was a bit sceptical about reading another Murakami book, I've read quite a few of them and found them great books but all too similar in their style and themes, however once I started reading the sample chapter I found myself hooked.

The two main characters, Tengo and Aomame, drive the book with the chapters alternating between the two. Most of the time the text is dedicated to character development but sometimes the plot starts moving quite quickly.

avatar for evanh

rated it

3 stars
avatar for miroiucodrut

rated it

5 stars
avatar for JFitzMan

rated it

5 stars