I have to confess that I picked this book because the title is sooo poetic. It is an unfinished sentence, so I guess that there may be a cliff hanger at the end of the book. Clearly, there is something similar but not exactly a cliff hanger.
I found the book to be sooo CHAOTIC when I started to read it. The first chapter is fine, I know the point of view is a bit weird, but there was a mission! I really want to know why is the suitcase important and what is inside the suitcase, but I never got to know. Anyway, the first chapter is still more fulfilling than the ones after because I know at the end that Chief Gorin was the person the narrator was looking for. The stories, or fragments that appeared later are different.
The constant change of exposition made me confused. I read about an argument in class about Cimmerian language, then suddenly been directed to read about a war. The characters surrounded the narrator change as well. Then at the end of chapter 5, Italo introduced another story Looks down in the gathering shadow. At this point, I really feel like Italo has many ideas been drafted but they are not good enough to be written as an entire book, so he combined those ideas together to be this book.
As I just thought in this way, Italo wrote in the beginning of the chapter 6 that readers are wondering the complete volume must exist, and they are seeking for those. Ya, exactly, this is what I was doing! Then, I took a step back, reflecting on the previous stories. Even though the first story gives a satisfactory ending, it does not mean anything to me. When I was small, what I usually do is looking for what I perceived from the book name. And if the book does not go in the way I expected, I just put it away.
It is interesting that the book constantly talks about reading a physical book when I was reading it on my tablet. It is not just about reading a physical book, it is the old ones, where we need to use the paper knife to cut the pages. I have never read a book like that, so correct me if I am wrong. I feel like the movement create a feeling of uncovering while reading a book. This book gives me a lot of feelings about uncovering. The first a few pages are about a station, it turns to a cooking scene afterwards, then it starts to describe a conversation at uni, and the prison at the seashore, etc.
The question I asked for this week is: is there any connections you guys found between these fragments?
