Quichotte
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
Sam DuChamp, un mediocre scrittore di spy stories, ispirandosi al classico di Cervantes crea un personaggio di nome Quichotte: un gentile commesso viaggiatore ossessionato dalla televisione che si innamora in modo impossibile di una star della TV. Insieme al figlio (immaginario), Sancho, Quichotte si lancia in un picaresco viaggio attraverso tutta l'America per mostrarsi degno della mano della amata, e fronteggia coraggiosamente i tragicomici pericoli di un'epoca in cui "Tutto Può Succedere". Nel frattempo il suo creatore, in preda a una inesorabile crisi di mezza età, si trova alle prese con sfide altrettanto pressanti per conto suo.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Rushdie's rambunctious latest (following The Golden House) hurtles through surreal time and space with the author's retooled Don Quixote on a quest for love and redemption in an unloving and irredeemable U.S.A. In this story within a story, Sam DuChamp, author of spy thrillers and father of a missing son, creates Quichotte, an elegant but deluded, TV-obsessed pharma salesman who strikes out cross-country with the son he's dreamed into existence, to kneel at the feet of an actress by the name of Miss Salma R. Quichotte and son Sancho brave Rushdie's tragicomic, terrifying version of America, a Trumpland full of bigots, opioids, and violence. They experience weird, end-of-time events people turn into mastodons, rips appear in the atmosphere but also talking crickets and blue fairies offering something like hope. Allowing the wild adventure to overwhelm oneself is half the fun. Rushdie's extravagant fiction is the lie that tells the truth, and, hilariously, it's not lost on the reader that he shares this Falstaffian and duplicitous notion with none other than Trump (who is never named). Rushdie's uproarious comedy, which talks to itself while packing a good deal of historical and political freight, is a brilliant rendition of the cheesy, sleazy, scary pandemonium of life in modern times.)