Nessuno ne parla

Hardcover, 162 pages

Italiano language

Published April 18, 2022 by Mondadori.

ISBN:
978-88-04-74639-3
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5 stars (3 reviews)

Una giovane donna recentemente balzata alla ribalta per i suoi post virali sui social media viaggia in tutto il mondo per incontrare i suoi fan adoranti. La sua esistenza è ormai un'immersione totale nella navigazione online, nel nuovo linguaggio e negli usi e costumi di quello che lei chiama "il portale". Nemmeno l'incombere di minacce esistenziali di enorme portata (il cambiamento climatico, il dilagare della precarietà economica, l'ascesa di un dittatore senza nome e un'epidemia di solitudine) è in grado di arrestare la valanga di immagini, dettagli e riferimenti che si accumulano per formare un paesaggio che è post-senso, post-ironia, post-tutto. "Siamo all'inferno?" si chiedono gli abitanti del portale. "Continueremo a fare questo fino alla morte?" Improvvisamente, due messaggi di sua madre bucano questa densa cortina di chiacchiericcio digitale: "Qualcosa è andato storto" e "Tra quanto riesci ad arrivare?". Mentre la vita reale e la sua posta in gioco si …

3 editions

No One Is Talking About This

No rating

Somebody cracks wise on the Internet (I know, I know, but stay with it, it’s fiction after all), and it goes viral. Interviews, guest lectures, panel discussions and world travel ensue until... Until something terrible happens, and everything collapses to the point of disruption. In Ohio, so you know it’s serious. Then, maybe, we see what matters in this big ol’ world of ours.

That’s mostly the story; as you read along, that’s what you’re reading. The story’s written in two parts: the happy part and the sad part. The happy part is happy, jouncing along with one-liners, wry observations and winsome meditations, a bit like a Steven Wright routine, except more Internetty. The sad part is sad, and, unlike the happy part, is capable of being spoiled, which cramps the review a little. It’s probably safe to point out if you’re familiar with Oscar Wilde’s (alleged!) comment about little …

Review of 'No One Is Talking About This' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

my first thoughts: did this woman just steal anecdotes from twitter to fill her quasi-novel? although couched in poetic language I recognised so many of the useless, wavelength-like arguments seen on twitter. the periodicity of fidget spinners discourse for example: from popular to predictable backlash, to autism/able-ism protection to gotchas on the former-backlashers, then finally excavating the fidget spinner history to pre-colonial times before landing in the ever-conflict field of Israel/Palestine. And, as the author points out, all this in a span of 4 days.

but as I immersed myself in the short paragraphs and disparate vignettes - recognising blow-ups, enjoying fresh interpretations, laughing out loud at absurdities, and recoiling at sudden bursts of profanity, it became clear that the reader was supposed to experience the novel like experiencing the scroll thru social media: what starts out as random enjoyable bits of information, deteriorates to depression. and then part two …