Underground epub pdf  mobi txt 电子书 下载

Underground epub pdf mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024

Underground epub pdf mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024


简体网页||繁体网页
Haruki Murakami Philip Gabriel

下载链接在页面底部


点击这里下载
    

想要找书就要到 静思书屋
立刻按 ctrl+D收藏本页
你会得到大惊喜!!

发表于2024-10-12


商品介绍



Vintage 2001-4-10 Paperback 9780375725807

Underground epub pdf mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024



类似图书 点击查看全场最低价

相关书籍





书籍描述

村上春树(1949-),日本著名作家。京都府人。毕业于早稻田大学文学部。1979年以处女作《且听风吟》获群像信任文学奖。主要著作有《挪威的森林》、《世界尽头与冷酷仙境》、《舞!舞!舞》、《奇鸟行状录》、《海边的卡夫卡》、《天黑以后》等。作品被译介至三十多个国家和地区,在世界各地深具影响。

在线阅读本书

Book Description

From Haruki Murakami, internationally acclaimed author of The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle and Norwegian Wood, a work of literary journalism that is as fascinating as it is necessary, as provocative as it is profound.

In March of 1995, agents of a Japanese religious cult attacked the Tokyo subway system with sarin, a gas twenty-six times as deadly as cyanide. Attempting to discover why, Murakami conducted hundreds of interviews with the people involved, from the survivors to the perpetrators to the relatives of those who died, and Underground is their story in their own voices. Concerned with the fundamental issues that led to the attack as well as these personal accounts, Underground is a document of what happened in Tokyo as well as a warning of what could happen anywhere. This is an enthralling and unique work of nonfiction that is timely and vital and as wonderfully executed as Murakami’s brilliant novels.

From Publishers Weekly

On March 20, 1995, followers of the religious cult Aum Shinrikyo unleashed lethal sarin gas into cars of the Tokyo subway system. Many died, many more were injured. This is acclaimed Japanese novelist Murakami's (The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, etc.) nonfiction account of this episode. It is riveting. What he mostly does here, however, is listen to and record, in separate sections, the words of both victims, people who "just happened to be gassed on the way to work," and attackers. The victims are ordinary people bankers, businessmen, office workers, subway workers who reflect upon what happened to them, how they reacted at the time and how they have lived since. Some continue to suffer great physical disabilities, nearly all still suffer great psychic trauma. There is a Rashomon-like quality to some of the tales, as victims recount the same episodes in slightly different variations. Cumulatively, their tales fascinate, as small details weave together to create a complex narrative. The attackers are of less interest, for what they say is often similar, and most remain, or at least do not regret having been, members of Aum. As with the work of Studs Terkel, which Murakami acknowledges is a model for this present work, the author's voice, outside of a few prefatory comments, is seldom heard. He offers no grand explanation, no existential answer to what happened, and the book is better for it. This is, then, a compelling tale of how capriciously and easily tragedy can destroy the ordinary, and how we try to make sense of it all. (May 1)Forecast: Publication coincides with the release of a new novel by Murakami (Sputnik Sweetheart, Forecasts, Mar. 19), and several national magazines, including Newsweek and GQ, will be featuring this fine writer. This attention should help Murakami's growing literary reputation.

From Library Journal

The deadly Tokyo subway poison gas attack, perpetrated by members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult on March 20, 1995, was the fulfillment of every urban straphanger's nightmare. Through interviews with several dozen survivors and former members of Aum, novelist Murakami (The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle) presents an utterly compelling work of reportage that lays bare the soul of contemporary Japan in all its contradictions. The sarin attack exposed Tokyo authorities' total lack of preparation to cope with such fiendish urban terrorism. More interesting, however, is the variety of reactions among the survivors, a cross-section of Japanese citizens. Their individual voices remind us of the great diversity within what is too often viewed from afar as a homogeneous society. What binds most of them is their curious lack of anger at Aum. Chilling, too, is the realization that so many Aum members were intelligent, well-educated persons who tried to fill voids in their lives by following Shoko Asahara, a mad guru who promised salvation through total subordination to his will. For all public and academic libraries.                               Steven I. Levine, Univ. of Montana, Missoula

From Booklist

After living abroad for eight years, novelist Murakami returned to Japan intent on gaining a deeper understanding of his homeland, a mission that took on an unexpected urgency in the aftermath of the Tokyo poison-gas attack in March 1995. Inspired by a letter to the editor from a woman whose husband survived the subway attack but suffered terrible aftereffects, Murakami set out to interview as many survivors as he could find who were capable of overcoming the Japanese reluctance to complain or criticize. With great sensitivity, insight, and respect, Murakami coaxed a remarkable group of people into describing their harrowing experiences aboard the five morning rush-hour trains on which members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult released deadly sarin gas. Unlike a journalist, Murakami doesn't force these searing narratives into tidy equations of cause and effect, good and evil, but rather allows contradictions and ambiguity to stand, thus presenting unadorned the shocking truth of the diabolical and brutal manner in which ordinary lives were derailed or destroyed. The most haunting aspect of these accounts is the eerie passivity of the passengers both during and after the assault, a phenomena echoed in Murakami's courageous interviews with Aum members, frank conversations that reveal the depth of these individuals' spiritual longings and the horror of their betrayal at the hands of their corrupt and insane leader. Shaped by his fascination with alternative worlds and humanity's capacity for both compassion and abomination, Murakami's masterful and empathic chronicle vividly articulates the lessons that should be learned from this tragic foray into chaos.

                             Donna Seaman

Book Dimension :

length: (cm)20.3                 width:(cm)13.3

Underground epub pdf mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024

Underground 下载 epub mobi pdf txt 电子书 2024

Underground pdf 下载 mobi 下载 pub 下载 txt 电子书 下载 2024

Underground mobi pdf epub txt 电子书 下载 2024

Underground epub pdf mobi txt 电子书 下载
想要找书就要到 静思书屋
立刻按 ctrl+D收藏本页
你会得到大惊喜!!

读者评价

评分

评分

##Logic, especially in language, is unreliable. If one's goal relies on a perfectly sound logical system, they could commit something horrible. Maybe, only maybe, the guidance could be humanism, but still, science, technology, or other human endeavors can go very wrong when only guided by logic.

评分

##采访教徒的部分比较有意思,那种专注于逻辑层面是否行得通,但没有情感流动的人,在现实层面有很多。读小说算是一种出口,让我们了解世上事有各种可能性,而不是非黑即白。

评分

##这本书是高三的时候为了老K英语课的presentation而读的,当时觉得受到了很深的震撼;书中关于恶的思考和恶的展现写得特别的好。这是村上春树写的书中我最喜欢的。

评分

##一九九五年三月二十日上班早高峰,以麻原彰晃为首的奥姆真理教指使多名信徒,在东京3条地铁线共计5个方向施放沙林毒气,共造成12人死亡,3800人受伤。村上春树用了1年时间采访了62位受害者,以访谈录的形式记录成一本《地下》,将悲剧发生时地铁里的情形,真实地展现在了读者的...  

评分

评分

##<答应别人邀约写了2017年读书总结,其中包括本书,原文照录如下> 2017年10月开始读,前前后后花了两个月时间,终于在年底读完。 这本书由村上春树亲自采访、执笔完成的一部地铁沙林毒气受害者访谈录。东京地铁沙林毒气事件,可能现在的年轻人(包括中国的年轻人和日本的年轻...  

评分

评分

Underground epub pdf mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024

类似图书 点击查看全场最低价

Underground epub pdf mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024


分享链接









相关书籍


本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度google,bing,sogou

友情链接

© 2024 book.idnshop.cc All Rights Reserved. 静思书屋 版权所有