Non (pas relu depuis des lustres).
Mon top 3 ce sont les deux que tu as lus + celui que je te conseille.
Modérateurs: Dunandan, Eikichi Onizuka
mais le résumé m'emballe pas des masses
Au sud de la frontière, à l'ouest du soleil et le passage de la nuit aussi, et on pourrait aussi argumenter que chronique d'un oiseau à ressort reste quand même très terre à terre
Murakami published “The City, and its Uncertain Walls” in 1980, a novella about an isolated town surrounded by a thick wall and a protagonist who arrives to become a “Dream Reader.” Deeply dissatisfied with the outcome, Murakami tried to bury the book, only to revisit it a few years later in what would become “Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World,” published in 1985. Still, the original story wouldn’t leave Murakami alone, and during the first years of the COVID-19 pandemic, Murakami shut himself away at home and dusted off the ol’ city map. The rewritten story released in English this week, translated by Philip Gabriel, is the vanity project of a globally bestselling author with a legion of loyal readers. It may delight first-timers and bolster Murakami canon for die-hards — but feel like deja vu for everyone else, absent some of the fun and zaniness of the 1985 novel.
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