![]() ![]() ![]() Rather, he seasons the story with just three or four key moments of otherworldliness that give its fairly grounded narrative that extra boost of surrealist intrigue that may well compel you to finish the book in one sitting, as it did me. With her help, Tsukuru sets off on a pilgrimage of truth that could either mend old wounds, or break him altogether.Īlthough his imagery is as vivid and transportive as ever, the magic realism that has become such a trademark in Murakami's work is used sparingly in “Colorless”. ![]() Rejected and lost, his life moves along emptily until he meets a girl who hears his story and tells him it's about time he found out exactly what really happened on that fateful day. Sixteen years pass, and Tsukuru is still shaken by this event. ![]() Then one day, during his second year in college, his friend's coldly, abruptly and without explanation, cut all ties with him. And yet, Tsukuru still feels dispensable. Despite Tsukuru's anomality, the group is as thick as thieves, operating in harmony and forming a perfect whole. The two girls are named Kuro (Black) and Shiro (White), and the two other boys are Aka (Red) and Ao (Blue). Well, except for Tsukuru, hence the “Colorless”. Comprising of two girls and three boys, each member of the group has an inherent colour in their surname. Tsukuru Tazaki is one of a group of five friends living in Nagoya, Japan, in the early 1990s. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |