Showing posts with label HarukiMurakami. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HarukiMurakami. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 7, 2020
1Q84
I finally finished this mastodont of a novel. I had the three parts in one book, printed on bible-like paper (very thin) which was about 1300+ pages long.
It took me nearly 3 months to finish and bear in mind that I was on maternity leave for 2 of those 3 months.
But, maybe partly because of te semi-lockdown due to Covid-19, I was able to read the final pages this morning.
After the initial cheering my husband asked if I had liked it. My answer was found to be anti-climactic.
1Q84 wasn't a revelation or one of those novels that changes the way you perceive the world around you (no pun intended ^^ ). Coming back to it day after day felt more like enjoying a show that continues for quite some time, instead of enjoying the fireworks which changes into embers much too quickly.
This novel is a crackling woodfire on a chilly night. I don't expect more from it than heat and light, but sometimes that's all one needs to get on.
I think I read it in the best time possible, because a lingering novel like this doesn't expect much from its reader. I could hop on and off really quickly depending on the needs of my family and I didn't feel frustrated.
The story revolves around a guy and a girl. Tengo and Aomame. Their love for each other is what fuels this entire novel.
Aomame is a fierce young woman, with firm beliefs on which she acts accordingly.
Tengo is a robust man with his own particular ideas who leads his life quietly, without expecting anything.
As we get to know them, the story introduces us to other interesting characters, a fantastical premise of a new religion based on 'The Little People' and a world with 2 moons in its night sky.
I recommend it to anyone not afraid of a challenge, to which the equivalent of a slow burning fire seems blissful.
Saturday, January 26, 2019
The Strange LIbrary
This was interesting...
and very short!!
Yes you are!
Don't get me wrong. I enjoyed the short story about a boy who is trapped in a library, with a sheep boy and an old man wanting to eat his brain.
The point of view that librarians eat brains filled with knowledge as a payment for providing all those books to everyone, is pretty good (and I wonder what Stephen King would've done with this kind of idea!)
Murakami has spun this into a fairy tale with a seemingly happy ending, but it felt in fact to be an allegory for trying to cope with the loss of a parent. His worrying about his mother, combined with his polite nature, make me believe that the protagonist is a very lonely boy terrified of losing the only person he feels he has left on this world, while the girl tries to tell him that there will be more friendship and even love is he just opens his heart. Even through a small crack someone will be able to slip through.
In my opinion this story deals with loneliness, and Murakami delivered it perfectly.
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