
Il Signore delle Mosche
3.70
3,213,179 valutazioni·67,659 recensioni
All'alba della prossima guerra mondiale, un aereo precipita su un'isola inesplorata, lasciando bloccato un gruppo di studenti. Inizialmente, senza la supervisione di adulti, la loro libertà è qualcosa da celebrare; così lontani dalla civiltà, i ragazzi possono fare tutto ciò che vogliono. Qualunque...
- pagine
- 182
- Format
- Paperback
- Pubblicato
- 1999-10-01
- Editore
- Penguin Books
- ISBN
- 9780140283334
Sull'autore

William Golding
218 libri · 0 follower
Sir William Gerald Golding was an Engish novelist, playwright, and poet. Best known for his debut novelLord of the Flies(1954), he published another twelve volumes of fiction in his lifetime. In 1980, he was awarded the Booker Prize forRites of Passage, the first novel in what became his sea trilogy,To the Ends of the...
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Valutazione e Recensione
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Recensioni della comunità
67,659 recensioni3.7
3,213,179 valutazioni
5
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4
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3
15%
2
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3%
Lisa of Troy·3 years ago
A group of boys are stranded on a remote and deserted island. How will these boys fare away from grownups, away from society, away from rules? Written in 1954, The Lord of the Flies, written by William Golding is considered a classic. The symbolism in this book is unreal especially if you consider the colors mentioned in the book (pink was mentioned 40 times). Like most people, I read this in high school, and I got a lot more out of it as an adult. At the very end, I now ponder if that actually ...
Adina ( catching up..very slowly) ·5 years ago
Edit: A friend send me this article of a real situation where a group of kids were left stranded on an island for 15 months. Spoiler alert, the Lord of The Flies scenario never happened, the boys behaved and organized themselves wonderfullyhttps://www.theguardian.com/books/202....Maybe,” he said hesitantly, “maybe there is a beast.” “What I mean is . . . maybe it’s only us.”.That quote sums up very well the idea of this modern classic. I ran away from this novel for years but it finally caught u...
Vit Babenco·5 years ago
Lord of the Flies is a parable of the human nature…His mind was crowded with memories; memories of the knowledge that had come to them when they closed in on the struggling pig, knowledge that they had outwitted a living thing, imposed their will upon it, taken away its life like a long satisfying drink.Ever since primordial times man has been ruled by two opposite forces: a wish to create and a wish to destroy… And to destroy is much easier than to create…There was the brilliant world of huntin...
Fergus, Weaver of Autistic Webs·5 years ago
The year 1954 saw the first publication of Golding’s masterwork, the point of which had (independently) bifurcated my personality in that same year - in a series of ironic inner game-changing events...Piggy and his upper-class schoolmates are marooned on a remote wild island. But left without adults, they quickly descend, like some of our leaders, into draconian martial violence - the powerful and strong versus the poor and weak (shades of Animal Farm?).And I myself nearly became a Piggy.January...
Sean Barrs ·7 years ago
“We did everything adults would do. What went wrong?”
For me, this quote sums up the entire book. It’s a powerful exploration of humanity and the wrongness of our society and it also demonstrates the hypocrisy of war. Adults judge the behaviour of children, but are they really any better? I think not. The scary thing about this book is how real it is. The Lord of the Flies bespeaks the brilliance of realistic dystopian fiction, it gives you a possible world scenario, a bunch of very h...
s.penkevich [hiatus-will return-miss you all]·14 years ago
This book will forever haunt me and be forever intertwined with my freshman year of high school. Its a great book for a classroom and was where I was first taught symbolism in a way that really stood out to me. This book is so rich in literary devices I remember it being the first moment where I realized the art of reading and writing as something far beyond storytelling and how much careful craft brings a work to life. I was hooked, I think from that moment on I had it in my mind that to be som...
Emily May·15 years ago
Kids are evil. Don't you know?I've just finished rereading this book for my book club but, to be honest, I've liked it ever since my class were made to read it in high school. Overall, Lord of the Flies doesn't seem to be very popular, but I've always liked the almost Hobbesian look at the state of nature and how humanity behaves when left alone without societal rules and structures. Make the characters all angel-faced kids with sadistic sides to their personality and what do you have? Just your...
Mk·17 years ago
I hated this book. First off, as I remember, it talks about humans failure to govern ourselves, or more broadly the failures of human nature. There are a few reasons why I think simply dropping a group of kids on a desert island does not in fact prove anything.1) These kids were raised in a capitalist, nominally demcratic society. The first thing they do is appoint leaders. As someone who spends my time working in consensus based groups seeking to challenge hierarchical structures, I have a stro...
Nancy·18 years ago
Lord of the Flies is one of the most disturbing books I've ever read. It was required high school reading and since then, I've read it four more times. It is as disturbing now as it was then. Using a group of innocent schoolboys stranded on an island, the author very realistically portrays human behavior in an environment where civilization no longer has meaning.
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Nora·18 years ago
I read this book a long time ago, long enough to where I barely remembered anything past the basic premise. So I picked it up again, only to wish I hadn't. There's a reason why they teach this book in middle school--in order to enjoy this book, one's intellectual cognizance must be that of a child, because otherwise you'll spend the entire time picking out everything that's wrong with the book. And there's a lot to pick out.From what little of the story that is actually coherent, I can see why t...