Il muro

296 pages

Published Dec. 3, 2020 by Sellerio.

ISBN:
978-88-389-4079-8
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Un muro lungo centinaia di chilometri è stato innalzato attorno alla Gran Bretagna. Serve a tenere fuori gli Altri, le moltitudini che arrivano dal mare a caccia di un lembo di terra asciutta, al riparo dal cambiamento climatico che ha modificato la geografia del pianeta. Sul Muro, a pattugliare le coste, ci sono i Difensori, giovani uomini e donne in servizio obbligatorio. Nessuno può sottrarsi alla difesa del paese. Kavanagh, il protagonista di questa storia, ha appena iniziato il suo periodo di sorveglianza. Se è fortunato, se niente va storto, durerà due anni, 729 notti. Se tutto va bene e sopravvive non dovrà mai più vedere il Muro in vita sua. Eppure ogni notte qualcosa può accadere, gli Altri possono arrivare, e per ogni invasore che supera il Muro un Difensore sarà abbandonato in mare. I diritti e le libertà individuali sono stati sacrificati in nome dell'interesse e della paura: …

7 editions

A Possible Future, and a Depressing One

With the seas rising, an unnamed area surrounds itself with a barrier wall to keep out both the sea, and the people outside who are barely surviving on boats and rafts. Without spoilers, I’ll say that readers get to see both sides of this wall.

There are so many correlations between the dystopian world of The Wall and today’s world of class division, and fear of ‘the other’. It’s allegory, satire, and warning all in one.

Grim, but fascinating.

Review of 'Wall' on 'Goodreads'

I came here looking for a comment on isolationist policies (a wall around Britain - Brexit, anyone?), the effects of climate change and maybe also a philosophical view on otherhood. I can't say I didn't get what I was looking for, but it turned out to be a bit more shallow and pretentious than I expected.
Lanchester begins to describe a post-Change Britain, but he never finishes this job. There are one or two leads, but never enough to paint a full picture. The same applies to the world outside the wall - there are hints, but no real concrete descriptions of what the world looks like at all.
This can be a good thing - to let the reader imagine these things for him-/herself - but to be able to do that, we need at least some hints as to what this world has become. But all we get …

Review of 'Wall' on 'Goodreads'

We're probably going to see more of this gender: the post-climate change dystopia. There was already Bacigalupi's Water Knife and others. This novel (not really sci-fi) takes its place squarely within that genre. In the post-climate disaster, The Change, era, England has built a Wall around itself to protect itself from The Others, the environmental refugees from other parts of the world, now underwater or uninhabitable. Young men and women now have to serve time on the Wall, as military service, for two years, to try and prevent the Others from getting through. If the Others succeed, they are offered a choice between euthanasia or becoming Help, that is, slavery. And the Wall Defenders who failed to stop them are put to sea, with close to zero chance of survival. As such, this system has created major generational hostility between the generations that did nothing to stop climate change and …