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In fact, this is a town of cats. When the sun starts to go down, many cats come trooping across the bridge—cats of all different kinds and colors. They are much larger than ordinary cats, but they are still cats. The young man is shocked by this sight. He rushes into the bell tower in the center of town and climbs to the top to hide. The cats go about their business, raising the shop shutters or seating themselves at their desks to start their day’s work. Soon, more cats come, crossing the bridge into town like the others. They enter the shops to buy things or go to the town hall to handle administrative matters or eat a meal at the hotel restaurant or drink beer at the tavern and sing lively cat songs. Because cats can see in the dark, they need almost no lights, but that particular night the glow of the full moon floods the town, enabling the young man to see every detail from his perch in the bell tower. When dawn approaches, the cats finish their work, close up the shops, and swarm back across the bridge.

Read more (starts at the giant W)
http://www.newyorker.com/fiction/features/2011/09/05/110905fi_fiction_murakami?currentPage=4

Murkakami, H. (2011.) 1Q84. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 402.

What did it mean for a person to be free? she often asked herself. Even if you managed to escape from one cage, weren’t you just in another, larger one?

—Murkakami, H. (2011.) 1Q84. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p 184.