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Open City: A Novel di Teju Cole
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Open City: A Novel (originale 2011; edizione 2012)

di Teju Cole

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1,7039010,284 (3.62)89
Feeling adrift after ending a relationship, Julius, a young Nigerian doctor living in New York, takes long walks through the city while listening to the stories of fellow immigrants until a shattering truth is revealed.
Utente:posthumose
Titolo:Open City: A Novel
Autori:Teju Cole
Info:Random House Trade Paperbacks (2012), Paperback, 259 pages
Collezioni:borrowed from public library
Voto:****1/2
Etichette:Nessuno

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Città aperta di Teju Cole (2011)

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» Vedi le 89 citazioni

Inglese (81)  Olandese (4)  Spagnolo (1)  Svedese (1)  Francese (1)  Tedesco (1)  Tutte le lingue (89)
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A story of solitude, of wandering the city and thinking, should be right up my alley. But although I enjoyed this book, I find that just a few weeks later nothing jumps up in my memory; no passages stayed in my thoughts or informed my own wanderings. I think I merely had the misfortune of reading this so closely after a book whose wanderings are pointed and brilliant with a clarity that remains in my thoughts. Still a great fan of Cole's work in its entirety, and more than willing to read another work. ( )
  Kiramke | Jun 27, 2023 |
Still thinking about this one... Photographic. Encounters feel like psychiatric observations with little focus on internal. Surprise at end when confronted by Moji... did it happen or not... ( )
  maryroberta | Jun 4, 2023 |
open city n. an undefended city; spec. a city declared to be unfortified and undefended and so, by international law, exempt from enemy attack.

Julius, a Nigerian psychiatrist living in Manhattan, is Teju Cole's humane, aesthetic, and highly observant narrator in Open City, a debut novel that has earned Cole comparisons to such heavyweights as Proust and Sebald. While Cole's project is similar in how he explores how our surroundings shape and inform our experiences, our subjective realities, and our relationships with others, the voice here is all his own even though some of the structural arrangements follow Proust—e.g., apart from the descriptions of Vinteuil's "little phrase," Julius's description in Open City of Mahler's Ninth Symphony is perhaps the most wonderful writing on music ever written—and Julius's various meanderings about Manhattan (and also Brussels) echo sections of Sebald's The Rings of Saturn with which I'm as yet only tangentially familiar.

The concept of the open city, which is emphasized in the novel during Julius's visit to Brussels, is critical to Cole's examination of how many city-dwellers thrive on feelings of safety: "We are the first humans who are completely unprepared for disaster. It is dangerous to live in a secure world." This is especially prevalent in Julius's post-9/11 Manhattan, and also in the many conversations he recounts—with relatives, with strangers, with patients, with Al-Qaeda sympathizers, with colleagues, with neighbors—that blend the Japanese-American internment camps of WWII, the Nazi occupation, the Vietnam War, and other domestic and global conflicts in order to consider how these relate to collective and individual cultural identities, especially at the level of dislocation and fracture, poised between living and dying: "To be alive, it seemed to me, as I stood there in all kinds of sorrow, was to be both original and reflection, and to be dead was to be split off, to be reflection alone."

Cole's salient prose takes in the breadth of human experience while living in a city whose ever-changing architecture, public spaces, crowds, and landscapes go unexamined by so many who live there. By contrast, because he is an outsider, Julius takes in everything, and on his walks through the city he is as able to observe a car accident, relate being mugged, offer the history of beached whales and birds dazed and dead by the Statue of Liberty's torch as intrinsic (but often forgotten) parts of New York City's narrative, and also reflect on the emotional experiences of a life lived straddling two very different worlds—that of Nigeria and that of Manhattan, that of childhood and that of adulthood, that of becoming and that of still becoming, only more consciously so. Just as the city has depths and hidden stories ("What Lenape paths lay buried beneath the rubble? The site was a palimpsest, as was all the city, written, erased, rewritten"), so, too, do individuals, and Julius's narrative is as much about coming to terms with his adopted city as it is with himself: "I wanted to find the line that connected me to my own part in these stories as it is unimaginable how many small stories people all over this city carried around with them."

Open City is a profound meditation on how one should live one's life with eyes wide open, taking in the inconsequential and relishing it for how it will later attach itself to our own subjective narrative, both in terms of how we view our lives looking back in time and also how we morph and change along with the cities we call our homes. ( )
  proustitute | Apr 2, 2023 |
Julius, un joven psiquiatra nigeriano residente en un hospital neoyorquino, deambula por las calles de Manhattan. Caminar sin rumbo se convierte en una necesidad que le brinda la oportunidad de dejar la mente libre en un devaneo entre la literatura, el arte o la música, sus relaciones personales, el pasado y el presente. En sus paseos explora cada rincón de la ciudad. Pero Julius no sólo recorre un espacio físico, sino también aquel en el que se entretejen otras muchas voces que le interpelan. Ciudad abierta, novela bellísima y envolvente, supone el descubrimiento de una voz tan original y sutil como extraordinaria.
  Natt90 | Feb 14, 2023 |
3.5 stars. Sophisticate walks around NYC with side visits to Nigeria and Belgium, meditating eruditely on his surroundings. Reminiscent of Netherland but with less invention, action, and/or characterization. ( )
  AlexThurman | Dec 26, 2021 |


 
Want to write a breakout first novel? The conventional wisdom says ingratiate yourself (Everything Is Illuminated), grab the reader by the lapels (The Lovely Bones), or put on an antic show (Special Topics in Calamity Physics). Teju Cole's disquietingly powerful debut Open City does none of the above. It's light on plot. It's exquisitely written, but quiet; the sentences don't call attention to themselves. The narrator, a Nigerian psychiatry student, is emotionally distant, ruminative, and intellectual. His account of a year spent walking around New York, encountering immigrants of all kinds, listening to their stories and recalling his own African boyhood, achieves its resonance obliquely, through inference—meaning you have to pay attention. But Open City is worth the effort.

Immigration and exile are not new literary subjects (Salman Rushdie, Chang Rae-Lee, Jhumpa Lahiri), but Cole's treatment of them has a quiet clarity and surprising force. Will Open City find a breakout audience? I wonder, given its slow pace and darkness of its theme. Still, I hope so; it's the most thoughtful and provocative debut I've read in a long time.
 
Teju Cole’s Open City is neither a melodrama, nor is it about a city that has technically been declared "open" during wartime. The novel is set in New York City, no more than a couple of years ago, and narrated by a Nigerian psychiatrist on a research fellowship. Throughout the novel, the psychiatrist, Julius, wanders the streets of the city taking careful note of everything he sees, and everyone with whom he interacts. His observations are recorded in beautifully clear prose with the precision of a clinician, or at least the way one might wish to imagine the precision of a clinician. The descriptions of the cityscape around him are interspersed with memories of his boyhood in Nigeria. His time in New York is interrupted by a trip to Brussels which Julius takes using up his entire four week vacation time, in the vague, unrealized hope of somehow encountering his grandmother there. He is, however, unsure as to whether she is still alive, or even if she lives there at all. Without a clear plan to find her, he continues his habit of wandering, observing, interacting, recording.
aggiunto da kidzdoc | modificaBookslut, Daisy Rockwell (Feb 1, 2011)
 
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for Karen
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And so when I began to go on evening walks last fall, I found Morningside Heights an easy place from which to set out into the city.
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Jeder Mensch muss sich unter bestimmten Bedingungen als Sollwert der Normalität setzen und davon ausgehen, dass seine Psyche für ihn selbst nicht undurchschaubar ist, nicht undurchschaubar sein kann. Vielleicht verstehen wir das unter geistiger Gesundheit: dass wir uns selbst, so verschroben wir uns auch finden mögen, niemals als die Bösewichte unserer eigenen Geschichte wahrnehmen.
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Feeling adrift after ending a relationship, Julius, a young Nigerian doctor living in New York, takes long walks through the city while listening to the stories of fellow immigrants until a shattering truth is revealed.

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