Set in Tokyo and in a mountain sanatorium in the late sixties, it is, one suspects that this is a very autobiographical, Murakami's gentle protestations to the contrary notwithstanding. This is the story of a college student, Toru Watanabe, trying to find himself, to grow up, to make a commitment to someone, and to be true to that commitment.
The choice of the song Norwegian Wood as a title is appropriate, especially regarding the song's little known subtitle (take a look at the Rubber Soul album and you'll see it), This bird has flown.
Watanabe once had (and was had by) two girls, one of whom is sliding slowly into complete mental disintegration, (this would be the bird that has flown) the other - feisty, independent, but as desperately lonely as Watanabe - lodging the claims of love, life, and a warm body against those of past pledges-pledges Watanabe views somewhat differently than the girl in question.
... First of all, this is an early effort-one would expect a bit of a shortfall in the sophistication department given Murakami's age when hr wrote it. More importantly, however, is the subject matter. This is a story of personal introspection about a romance-not about the alienation and anomie inherent to complex, inhumane, technocratic societies. Of course the elements of style Murakami would impose on these two radically different subjects is different.
At it's core, this is a tale of loss. Watanabe ends up losing his love in various ways and to various degrees throughout the book till she's finally totally gone in the end. The book is about how Watanabe copes with these various elements of loss.
I can understand why some fans of this author would find the book disconcerting as it is well outside the typical structure of a Murakami novel and the effects of this departure, given the extraordinarily distinct style Murakami normally utilizes, seem magnified over what would be expected from a more mainstream author. Don't let such comments dissuade you from reading this novel. I greatly admire Murakami's other work and liked this as well. It's a book that can be thoroughly enjoyed by anyone willing to accept it for what it is rahten than impose their own expectations on it.
It's not the selling a whackload of copies, it's the fact that Murakami was appalled that the book he called an "experiment" became his most popular work.
If you've never read any of Murakami's novels before, then you won't understand how entirely -different- Norwegian Wood is from them. Murakami is a guy who writes about strange women with magic ears, men possessed by malevolent sheep, evil politicians with magical powers of defilement, teenagers who push their boyfriends off motorcycles, and cybernetic mind control. The last thing one would expect from him is a pure and simple love story, but here it is, and fortunately or unfortunately, it is one of his most intriguing and skillful works.
The story's pretty easy to understand, but the layers of meaning are not. Murakami's fascination with wells might zoom right over the heads of readers who are either unaccustomed to his narrative, or aren't paying attention to metaphor.
Essentially, Norwegian Wood (yes, named after the song by the Beatles) is a love story, but one with unexpected twists of fate, tragedy, comedy, and stuffed with melancholia. Murakami might not write a very convincing 20-year old, but the slight over-maturity of the main character's voice can be ignored in favor of the insights he gives.
I wouldn't reccomend reading this book first if you're seriously interested in Murakami's works, it's not the best to represent his style. But if you aren't up for TV people or walking through walls, then read Norwegian Wood.
Also, this book just didn't read as well as the other two - whether it was the translation or simply the way it was written, I have no way of knowing. But several times I found myself cringing at the awkward turns of phrase that kept turning up.
I thought the last 70 pages or so of the book were very good, but the vast majority of the remainder seemed to consist of pointless meandering.
I've rated his other books five stars but this one gets two for the following reasons: (1) It's simply not anywhere as good as the other two, and (2) I'm totally burned out on the overall theme that has been repeated in all three.
I have since read no other of Murakami's books. Glossing over some of their back covers I can't escape the impression that settings, moods and plots seem to vary only a little from book to book. I'd rather stick to the Wind-up Bird Chronicle, then. It'll give me re-reading pleasure for the years to come.
I was, but I was also intensely interested. The various intertwining narratives split their time between the concrete and the nebulous, the ordinary and the supernatural. The result is a schitzophrenic reality with a smooth finish, that can be read and enjoyed simply as a wonderful story. I never felt that Murakami was trying too hard.
However, the layers of symbolism that make up the story are difficult to analyze and understand. Water is obviously a major unifying thread. Everything in the story is built around the "flow" of life, of events. This flow is marked by the behavior of the literal water in the story, from tap water to the ocean to a dry well. Mr. Honda tells Toru to follow the flow, and he obeys, even as it takes him to ever-stranger places. Another theme deals with identity. Lt. Mamiya and the Kano sisters are empty. Kumiko, May Kasahara, and Nutmeg's women have disturbing and nameless things lurking within. Toru must combat the evil that lives inside Noboru Wataya, and rescue both his beloved wife Kumiko and himself, armed only with a vague sense of unreality, a gateway well, and a baseball bat. In the end, he succeeds, though just barely. His victory is not total, but it does have a quiet kind of triumpth.
This book is not "about" any one thing. It is better understood through feeling than through thought, a characteristic that makes it difficult to describe; it must be experienced. When I finished it, I felt bewildered, yet serenely satisfied.
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Many of the male characters in this collections of 17 short stories are stay-at-home husbands married to career-oriented wives. Whether house-sitting, working around the house, or tempted by younger women, these men deal with their sexual urges and emotions without help from traditional norms. Other characters explore their awakening sexual urges, sometimes destructively, other times formatively. The female characters are strong, confident, and often unsupportive and seductively teasing.
This collection is also a more than a less book. The narrative voice is verbose and unchecked. This is a selfish narration, typically masculine, oblivious of utility or artfulness. But it is also honest. The stories are full of tidbits of erudition, excessive detail, and, sometimes, usefulness. It is more tape recorded psychology project than vision.
However, culturally, the collection is sterile. it is not informative about Japanese norms and developments. Murakami's characters are typically middle-class, urban, cosmopolitan, and ordinary. This is not a sourcebook, to learn about Japanese attitudes, but a document chronicling the leveling effects of globalization. In many ways, it is as disturbing in its sterility as it is in its conclusions.
All in all, this collection shows the whole breadth of Murkami's writing abilites, and is not something to be missed by any of his fans.
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The six stories contained in this slim volume are thematically bound by 1995's Kobe earthquake. While there is a mention or two to the event in each story, these stories primarily deal with larger, more emotional issues. From beach bonfires to superhero frogs, Murakami never fails to dazzle. This collection is excellent.
In the first story, a salesman is left by his wife because he is a shallow person. His response is to take a vacation, in which he discovers he's given away his soul. The second story is more or less a contrast between aimless youth and an older man, as they sit around a bonfire drinking. Then comes the life of a young man born to a religious nut, and his halfhearted attempt to track down his father. Next is the quasi-mystical tale of a middle-aged divorcée doctor seeking to restore herself and lose the bitterness that has built up within her. The fifth story is a wild, phantasmagorical episode where a mouse of a bank clerk is called upon by a superhero frog to journey beneath the earth to do prevent an evil worm from causing an earthquake that will destroy Tokyo. The most conventional story is the the last, in which a gentle, bookish man goes through life longing for his best friend's girl. Although all three were close in college, he was too shy to make his move, and lost her to his more charismatic friend. Given the rest of the stories, it's surprisingly sweet and it's placement at the end seems to hint at a belief by Murakami that sometimes (although, rarely) things work out in the end.
As a whole the writing is universally excellent'simple and elegant'however there's a certain detachment throughout them. They are moving, but very, very subtly so'and in that sense, the book is perhaps best read in bits and pieces, and twice to receive its full impact. Note: these stories were originally published in GQ, Granta, Harper's, The New Yorker, and Ploughshares.
this new book by one of my Favorite writers and when I
did I was beyond elation...
Haruki Murakami is a genius. He is the master of
telling a story and is the best in his genre -
whatever that may be. The six stories in this gem of a
book revolve around people's lives before and after
the Earthquake that shook Kobe in 1995.
The Psychological shock and collective grief are
beautifully depicted through Murakami's words and
prose. An electronic salesman rethinks and knows
himself after his wife disappears one day - and he has
to deliver a package. A Giant frog visits a Bank
employee seeking help to save the World. A man builds
bonfires to live and relive his life over and over
again. Such stories and more are what make this book a
true genius.
I may be biased towards Murakami but he is the best!!
These stories in the true sense portray everything
that humans have to offer. From love to loneliness to
jeaulosy to tragic.
"Honey Pie" is probably my favorite piece of the
collection. "There's at least one good thing to tell
about even the most ordinary bear," Junpei tells the
little girl who is listening to his tale of the two
bears. This fairy tale and the main story are
interwoven in such a way that we become the little
child listening to the narrator as we read. Of all the
pieces, it is the one that, I think, most perfectly
captures the delicate balance in the relationship
between the self and the world. As the author writes,
it is "about people who dream and wait for the night
to end, who long for the light so they can hold the
ones they love."
A great great read!!
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This is my second Murakami book, the first being Wind-up Bird, which I loved. Compared to Wind-up Bird, though, A Wild Sheep Chase comes off more like a short story than an independant novel. It is not any where near as spawling or epic as Wind-up, nor is the plot as deep, or the characters as rich. But inpsite of this, I still really liked A Wild Sheep Chase. No, there were not any profound themes, and my view of the world has not really changed. But man, was that one enjoyable read... Great, but shallow, story. Great, but hardly dynamic, character. And, most importantly, GREAT writing. Man I love Murakami...
The narrator of "Sheep Chase" begins as something of an Everyman. His mate leaves him, his job pays him well but isn't very satisfying, he is intelligent but little in his life seems to stimulate him to thought. You wouldn't say he is going through life with blinders on, but nor is his life totally examined, either. Life is, more or less, something that is just happening to him. You could probably think of a dozen people you know who would easily fit his character.
Still, this is a Murakami novel, after all, and pretty soon he is, in the words of Tolkein, simply swept away, a stranger in a strange land with no idea of how he got there. A perfectly ordinary photo that he uses in a brochure catches the attention of a powerful political figure, "The Boss", who has been inexplicably lying on the verge of death for some years, hanging on as if by some supernatural power. The photo, it's discovered, has a special sheep in it. A type of sheep who's breed does not exist. A minion of The Boss makes him an offer he cannot refuse: find that sheep...
He meets up with a young woman who, among other things, is a call girl for an exclusive members-only club, and does ear modeling on the side. Together, they set off to find this elusive sheep-that-doesn't-exist, all the while trailing the narrator's old friend, The Rat, who seems to always be one step ahead of them.
Much has been written about Murakami and "Wild Sheep Chase", including that this work is a shining example of the postmodern novel. While this may be the case, potential readers shouldn't shy away from this book simply because they may not know a fig about postmodernism. Unlike other "postmodern novels", which are often thickets of high rhetoric and voluminous nonsense, "Wild Sheep Chase" can be read on a multitude of levels: both as lit crit and as pure, enjoyable fiction. To read it strictly as one or the other is to do a great injustice to this work.
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Boy was I stunned by it. One of the best books I've read in a long time and probably one of the best novels I've read that's been written in the last 20 years.
Beautifully written (and translated) it spoke to many different sides of me. The novel brilliantly fuses a number of different cultural genres (science fiction, mystery, film noir, fantasy, magical realism, "cyberpunk") into a mix that, amazingly, works very well. Try to imagine a collaborative effort by Garcia-Marquez, William Gibson, and Walker Percy and you almost might be able to envision what this book feels like to read. Who else but a Japanese author could make such an intriguing pop culture cocktail?
Besides being a genre-bender, the premise of the book and the questions that it raises concerning the relationship between humanity and technology, the soul and the mind, and the individual and society are quite thought provoking.
Did I mention that the book is very funny at times too?
This is unlike any other book you'll ever read. Definitely worth checking out IMHO.
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I admit that I was just starting to get tired of reading the first half of the book which consists of first person retellings of their encounter with the deadly gas Sarin. But, there IS a point to all this -- it has the overall effect of an "everyman" trauma, almost Joycean in scope that can't be captured from a mere report or media take. Then, Murakami turns to his own thoughts and his interviews of Aum followers which is particularly interesting. In the end, I found this fascinating, but I do prefer his novels. Still, I applaud him for taking a risk and venturing outside his usual narrative space. Viva Murakami!
the actual anecdotes of the various businessmen and students murakami details are chilling. i, a writer myself, can't put it any other way. at first, i marveled at these stories (like the one where the guy says he asked his wife for a divorce just before going to work), thinking, "what eloquent people murakami has found amidst the 'ordinary' japanese population!" only after reading twenty or so of these interviews did i realize it: every person, not just the those who survived the tokyo gas attack, has a story to tell. most people just don't have the ability to flatten that story out into eloquent words; murakami proves, in this book, that, if nothing else, he is talented as an interviewer, talented at asking questions that will elicit eloquent responses. that makes me respect him even more as a writer than i did before, which is a good thing.
a bad thing, though, is that the stories in the first part tend to get a little bit tedious. murakami is making his point, about how japanese people shun "weirdness" without admitting that they too may be susceptible to it, and he is making that point over and over again. that's not to say each and every anecdote wasn't thoroughly interesting, however.
murakami's small autobiographical essay following part one, which might seem misplaced if one simply looks at the table of contents, comes as a great revelation. he explains how he was back in japan after living abroad for so long, staying a hundred miles south of tokyo on the day of the sarin attack. he explains how he wasn't even watching television or listening to the radio; he was tidying up some bookshelves and listening to some records. murakami goes on to explain his sabbatical from japan, all the things he left behind, and how he wrote about japan when he was away from japan.
underground, to me, as a writer, is another writer's desire to find a REASON to return to his roots. murakami explains how he was just thinking, that quiet day of the gas attack, of how he wanted to return to japan for the purpose of writing a not-so-distanced book about japan. how strange that the gas attack, the soon-to-be subject for his next book, was happening in those very moments.
murakami, in his essay, talks a lot about the wind-up bird chronicle and hard-boiled wonderland and the end of the world, and with good reason. murakami, in staying so far from japan for so long, was left with nothing other than the past memories of japan to inspire his writing, and so his books, especially wind-up bird chronicle (with its somewhat heavy exposition on the japanese doings in manchuria), rely on japan's past, not just murakami's past. it's a bit confusing, i know. still, this feeling hit me as i finished reading murakami's interlude. this book was his reason for writing about japan in the present, his reason for going back to his home.
what he and his interview subjects detail in this book is quite revelatory, as far as japanese psychology is concerned; i won't bother going into detail. for me, the highlight of the book is murakami's reason for writing it. sometimes, we feel like we have to get away from something -- in murakami's case, it was the insane popularity of norwegian wood -- and when we do, well, we have to come back eventually, don't we? it strikes me as more than just ironic that japan, a country whose glorious culture is mostly borrowed, would produce a people who would produce a writer who would produce such a book. the big question is: when did the japanese people leave "japan" behind? when are they coming back? and, even then, where are they going to go? it took murakami until his middle forties to ask such big and critical questions in book form, and it's only natural that his book, not even on a subconscious level, doesn't answer them.
i subtract a star because it can grow (slightly) tedious. still, i can forgive that, because it made me think.
and i LOVE the cover art!
The first two-thirds of the book are dedicated to the survivors and relative interviews. While touching, shocking and surprising, after the first dozen or two, they begin to take on a numbing quality. So many of the stories share so many themes ("I had to get to work...", "I'm not so much angry as confused", etc.) that, in retrospect, they run together. In fact, the two things about the attack that stand out most in my mind are that (a) while some of the survivors and family members are incredibly angry over the situation, most are not so much angry as confused and hurt, and (b) while almost everyone agrees that the situation was handled incredibly poorly by the emergency services and lives were lost as a result, no one wants to sue. They merely wish to get on with their lives.
Where the book really shines, though, is in the Aum interviews. Murakami profiles members of the cult who came from different backgrounds, had different aims in joining Aum and saw different sides of it as members. In this section, we begin to see the breakdown of the "salaryman phenomenon" in Japan at a personal level. People who joined were mostly intelligent, if highly misguided, and wanted more from their lives than office work could give them. Between the two groups, Murakami begins to show a Japan wtih serious social issues straining below the surface of an otherwise quiet and conformist society.
Admittedly, this sort of classification may be a little premature for Japan, but it does indicate the Japan faces the same problems today that many others (like the US) face. I recommend this book not just for those interested in the gas attack and the people were that committed it, but also for the political scientists and the social anthropologists wanting a look at the problems and difficulties facing Japan as a country. While, as Murakami himself says, he is primarily a novelist and this is his first real attempt at nonfiction, I hope he revisits this format in the future when looking at other modern problems in Japan.
The most striking thing to me about this book, was that Murakami actually made me, a woman, understand what it's like for a man to feel love and lust for a woman. I understood all of the narrator's thoughts and feelings. I guess that's what's great about Murakami's books. If you love Murakami, then read this one too. It will be like hanging out with an old friend.
The storyline is only a cover for Murakami to unfold his reflections on these themes - Sumire was swept by her love for an otherworldly woman; meanwhile, the earthier "I"(is he yet again nameless?) quietly awaits her love. It's his discussion on the contradictory forces behind these characters that makes Sputnik Sweetheart an intriguing read: Sumire was named after a Mozart's song with the most beautiful music and the most callous lyrics; Miu is a foreigner who can no longer speak her mother tongue; "I" is a passionate, kind, intelligent teacher, who nonetheless sleeps with the mother of one of his pupils. All of them feel the force of destiny, and each answers in one's own way: Sumire disappears after her quest for heavenly beauty; Miu is no longer a living person, but a memorial to the person she was, just like the statue of her father. "I" remains in this world, resists, and hangs on to a thread of hope that nobody else would call hope. All three are aware that they need some fresh blood - the spirit - to revitalize their being - the white bones.
Murakami's approach is even more abstract and conceptual here than before, and it enables him to hit some sublime emotional notes, for example, the horrid scene when Miu watchs her own rape, and the final scene when "I" waits for Sumire to call back. The pain was so pure and transcendental - Murakami definitely spills some blood over the white bones here!
The prose is absolutely stunning: it flows like a piece of music, with tones and colors and subtle emotions, even a bit serene sloppiness. Hat off to the translators.
The book reads like the few moments of unreality before settling into sleep. Like something from the comic book "The Sandman," this is a story of dreams, moons, love and cats.
With the title "Sputnik Sweetheart," I was expecting some sort of hard-metal story, where love shatters on technology or maybe something about the fast pace of modern life in Japan. I certainly wasn't expecting this gentle, silent love short story, told to the sound of Brahms and with the flavor of French wines.
Of course, the style of writing and the ideas are the forefront of the novel, with the actual plot taking a supporting role. The characters are wholly unrealized, mere glimpses of caricatures. They love, they live and they do so poetically. They have ideas, and those ideas are worked out in the medium of the written word. Minimalist seems to be thrown around, and maybe that is so, but I don't see it. The words flow, and hold together well. The plot is fleeting, an altogether unresolved, the the half-memory of a dream that made sense at the time, but seems strange in the re-telling.
An excellent book, one best read right before bedtime.