Sundays are for Murakami (South Of The Border, West Of Sun) / Nedjelje su za Murakamija ( Južno od granice, zapadno od sunca)
Sundays are for Murakami. Indeed, this day seems perfect to write about this writer. I always felt there was something dreamy and melanchonic about Sundays. No wonder this Sunday got me thinking about Murakami, about Sputnik and South OF The Border, West of The Sun. This evening I shall speak only about the latter, but tomorrow, who knows? They say
that Murakami is one of those authors you either love or hate. I can actually
understand how his style of writing might not be for everyone’s taste, but I happen
to love him. His unique writing style always had a sort of hypnotic power over
me. I feel enchanted when I read his novels, almost like I’m entering some
magical world. Moreover, at times it is almost
like I’m in the book myself, a silent observer, but nevertheless, a person very
much present. Do you know that feeling when you feel a part of a book right from the
start? You only started reading it but you already feel immersed in it? When
the first sentences draw you in completely? You’ve just started to read it, but
you know you’re going to love it. I don’t know exactly how Murakami does it,
but I could make a guess. It is the ease with which he creates his characters,
revealing their inner world before our eyes ,in ever more detail, with each page
we turn. He is so brilliant at capturing the mood of his protagonists that we
can’t help feeling for them and feeling with them. At times it might even seem like
we know his characters better than ourselves.
Nedjelje su za Murakamija. Doista, ovaj se dan čini savršen za pisati o ovome piscu. Uvijek mi se činilo da je nedjelja pomalo sanjiv i melankoničan dan. Nije čudno što ove nedjelje razmišljam o Murakamiju, o Sputniku i Južno od granice, zapadno od sunca. Ove večeri govoriti ću samo o ovome posljednjom romanu. Sutra, tko zna? Kažu da je Murakami jedan od pisaca koje ili mrzite ili volite. Mogu razumjeti kako njegov stil pisanja možda i nije za svakoga, ali ja ga volim. Njegov jedinstveni stil pisanja uvijek nad mnom ima neku moć hipnoze. Osjećam se kao da sam u nekom čarobnom svijetu kada čitam njegove romana, gotovo kao da sam začarana. Doista, nekad imam osjećaj kao da sam i sama u knjizi, tihi promatrač, ali svejedno posve prisutna kao osoba. Znate onaj osjećaj kada se osjećate dijelom knjige od samoga početka? Tek ste je počeli čitati, a već imate osjećaj da ste uronili u nju? Kada vas prva rečenica potpuno uvuče u priču? Tek ste je počeki čitati, a već znate da će vam se veoma svidjeti. Ne znam kako to točno Murakami radi, ali mogla bi pogađati. To je lakoća s kojom stvara svoja likove otkrivajući njihov unutrašnji svijet u detalje sa svakom novom stranicom. On je tako sjajan u hvatanju osjećaja svojih protagonista da jednostavno moramo suosjećati i osjećati s njima. Ponekad se može čak i učiniti da poznajemo njegove likove bolje od njih samih.
“I always feel as if I'm struggling to become someone else. As if I'm trying to find a new place, grab hold of a new life, a new personality. I suppose it's part of growing up, yet it's also an attempt to re-invent myself. By becoming a different me, I could free myself of everything. I seriously believed I could escape myself - as long as I made the effort. But I always hit a dead end. No matter where I go, I still end up me. What's missing never changes. The scenery may change, but I'm still the same old incomplete person. The same missing elements torture me with a hunger that I can never satisfy. I think that lack itself is as close as I'll come to defining myself.” ― Haruki Murakami, South of the Border, West of the Sun
Both Murakami's writing style and the general mood of his books have something very unpretentious
about them. It is, I suspect, a result of great self-control. His books are often quite sad but this emotion is always kept at bay. Murakami writes simply but beautifully; it makes me wonder how he
sounds in original (I doubt I’ll ever become fluent in Japanese, so I will have
to keep relying on translations). This simplicity and minimalism in writing
works very well in this novel, adding another layer of sophistication to it.
That is the world I would be tempted to use if I had to describe his books in
one word: sophistication. His writing, for most part, doesn’t seem lyrical to
me, yet there are always those special moments when his writing style becomes
amazingly graceful and poetical. He certainly has his signature style. Murakami
uses metaphors and symbols with much ease, creating with them a thing of
delicate beauty. What was it that Wilde said? An artist is a creator of beautiful things. You're quite right Wilde, quite right indeed. It is not an easy task to create something touchingly beautiful.
Nešto je posve nepretenciozno u Murakamijevom stilu pisanja i općoj atmosferi njegovih knjiga. Mislim da se tu radi o velikoj samokontroli. Njegove knjige su često jako tužne, ali on drži tu emociju pod kontrolom. Murakami piše jednostavno, ali lijepo, pa se pitam kako zvuči u originalu (no pošto dvojim da ću ikada naučiti japanski, morati ću se pouzdati u prijevode). Jednostavnost i minimalizam u njegovom pisanju sjajno funkcionira u ovome romanu, dajući mu još jedan sloj sofisticiranosti. Tu bih riječ bila volja upotrijebiti kada bi morala opisati njegova djela jednom riječju: sofisticiranost. Njegovo pisanje mi se većinom i ne čini liričnim, no postoje oni posebni trenuci kada njegove riječi postanu nevjerojatno graciozne i poetične. Svakako ima svoj poseban stila. Murakami se koristi riječima i simbolima s puno lakoće, stvarajući s njima delikatno lijepu stvar. Kako je ono Wilde rekao? Umjetnik je stvaratelj lijepih stvari. Bio si u pravu, doista u pravu. Nije lako stvoriti nešto što je toliko lijepo da dira u srce.
Murakami’s
exploration of theme of human loneliness brings Kafka to our minds. Indeed, I
can see many similarities between them, not just in the choice of themes
explored but to an extent in the writing styles as well. Kafka had this way of making surrealistic/fantastical
elements in his work seem perfectly plausible. Murakami uses them in a slightly
different way, he is more ambiguous, and when it comes to certain events, you’re
never quite sure whether the event being described is real or imagined. Both writers know how to employ fantastical/surreal
to their advantage. Somehow those elements are employed so skilfully by these
two writers, that they manage not only to deepen their descriptions of human
loneliness and isolation, but give them additional meanings. Murakami’s works
feel a bit dreamier than Kafka’s and they do have different styles but there
are similarities between them, no doubt about that. It is no coincedence that Murakami mentions Kafka in the title of one of his novels (Kafka On The Shore).
Murakamijevo istraživanje teme ljudske usamljenosti navodi nas na razmišljanje o Kafki. Doista, mogu vidjeti dosta sličnosti među njima, ne samo u izborima tema koje su istraživali već i do jedne mjere u stilu pisanja. Kafka je imao tu sposobnost da učini da sam se nadrealni i fantastični elementi čine posve mogućima. Murakami ih koristi na malo drukčiji način, on je više ambiciozan i kada se radi o određenim događajima nikada niste sigurni jesu li oni izmišljeni/izmaštani ili su stvarni. Oba pisca znaju kako iskoristiti nadrealno i fantastično u svoju korist. Nekako ova dva pisca tako dobro upotrijebljavaju te elemente da uspjevaju ne samo produbiti svoj opis ljudske usamljenosti i izolacije, već mu dati i dodatna značenja. Murakamijeva djela su malo više sanjiva od Kafkinih i imaju različit stil, ali među njima stvarno postoje sličnosti. Nije slučajnost da Murakami spominje Kafku u naslovu jednoga od svojih romana ( Kafka na obali).
I was
amazed at how easy I found it to sympathize with and feel for the protagonist
of South of The Border, West Of The Sun. The protagonist of this novel, Hajimi, is not
by any means a perfect man. It seems that he has a perfect life, though.
Married with two children and a successful job- what man could want more? Yet,
underneath it all, Hajimi is somewhat unhappy and obsessed with his past. He
owns a jazz club, he is married to a woman who adores him, his marriage is by no
means build on false pretences- and yet he is so utterly dissatisfied with
something, it is like there is something deep inside of him, a worm of doubt eating
up his life. Don't we all feel like that sometimes? If there was something in Hajimi’s life that he hates, he could
understand it, but there is mystery in his unhappiness, it runs deep. He is a
happy man in many ways and he doesn’t hide it, he feels grateful for it even, but
there is always a but…. both in life and in literature.
Zadivilo me koliko mi je bilo lako suosjećati s protagonistom ovoga romana. Glavni lik, Hajimi, nije savršen čovjek. No, čini se da ima savršen život. Oženjen, dvoje djece i uspješan posao. Tko bi više poželio? Ipak ispod svega toga, Hajimi je donekle nesretan i opsjednut prošlošću. Vlasnik je jazz kluba, oženjen je ženom koja ga obožava, njegov brak nije građen na laži- no ipak je duboko nezadovoljan s nečim, kao da ga nešto duboko u njemu izjeda, neki crv sumnje mu jede život. Zar se svi mi ne osjećamo ponekad tako? Kad bi postojalo nešto u njegovom životu što mrzi, mogao bi to razumjeti, ali ima misterije u njegovoj nesreći, onda je ima dublje temelje. On je na puno način sretan čovjek i to ne skriva, čak se i osjeća zahvala, ali...uvijek postoji ali...i u životu i u književnosti.
“I hurt myself deeply, though at the time I had no idea how deeply. I should have learned many things from that experience, but when I look back on it, all I gained was one single, undeniable fact. That ultimately I am a person who can do evil. I never consciously tried to hurt anyone, yet good intentions notwithstanding, when necessity demanded, I could become completely self-centred, even cruel. I was the kind of person who could, using some plausible excuse, inflict on a person I cared for a wound that would never heal.” ― Haruki Murakami, South of the Border, West of the Sun
Some might
see Hajimi as an irresponsible man undergoing a mid-life crisis, but I don’t
think is it so simple. This novel is much too complex for something like that.
If feels more like a psychological study of character than just an ordinary story about
some selfish guy discontent with his life. If our protagonist hurts others, he also hurts himself deeply. The richness of this book is composed of
many layers. One of them can certainly be found in its philosophical exploration
of the human condition. What does it mean to be human? Why do we always want
more? The existentialism is subtly played out in this one, much like music in a
jazz bar, it echoes through the room until it becomes a part of you and nests
itself somewhere deep in your heart. You either hate it or love it. That’s the
way with Murakami. People tend to either be utterly moved by his writing or
feel it does nothing for them. Obviously, I fall into the first category. I
agonized for and with the protagonist, thought about him perhaps even more that he did himself. 'How can a fictional character think about himself?', someone might ask. If it was you, feel free to imagine me giving you a dirty eye. Seriously thought, one of the things I love about Murakami's protagonists is how brutally honest they are with themselves. They reveal themselves to as wonderfully imperfect in their fragility- and it is hard not to love them.
Neki bi mogli vidjeti Hajima kao neodgovornoga čovjeka koji prolazi kroz krizu srednjih godina, no ne mislim da je to tako jednostavno. Ovaj roman je presložen za nešto takvo. Više je psihološka studija karaktera nego tek obična priča o sebičnom čovjeku nezadovoljnom svojim život. Ako je naš protagonist naudio drugima, naudio je i sebi. Bogatstvo ove knjige ima puno slojeva. Jedan od njih je svakako psihološka studija ljudskoga stanja. Što to znači biti čovjek? Zašto uvijek želimo više? Egzistencijalizam je suptilno upotrijebljen u ovom romanu, kao glazba u jazz baru, odjekuje kroz sobu dok ne postane dio nas i ugnijezdi se negdje duboko u srcu. Ili ga mrziš ili ga voliš. Tako je to s Murakamijem. Ljudi su ili beskrajno dirnuti njegov pisanjem ili im ništa ne znači. Očito ja upadam u prvu kategoriju. Bila sam u agoniji za i s protagonistom, mislila o njemu možda čak i više nego što je on mislio o sebi. "Kako može književni lik razmišljati o sebi?", netko bi se mogao upitao. Ako ste to bili bi, slobodno zamislite kako vas mrko gledam. Za ozbiljno, jedna stvar koja mi se sviđa kod Murakamijevih protagonista je koliko su oni brutalno iskreni sa sobom. Otkrivaju nam se kao divno nesavršenosti u svojoj krhkosti te ih je teško ne voljeti.
What (or
whom) is Hajimi looking for, this man who seemingly has it all? Perhaps
it all comes down to his past and a spirit of lost love (the most potent of
spirits, right?). Hajimi grow up as a single child in a time when it wasn’t
usual for Japanese parents to have only one child. This turned him into an oddity of
some kind, perhaps something that we would referred to (in Victorian, colonial
and postcolonial literature) as ‘an other'. However, he manages to find another
‘other’- Shimamoto, a girl who is, like himself, a single child. Together these
two finally feel complete, but unfortunately they lose touch when they families
move away. This childhood friendship/ love continues to haunt our protagonist. Suddenly,
Shimamoto reappears and Hajimi, now a married man, is captured under the spell
of her mystery.
Što (ili koga) Murakami traži, taj čovjek koji naizgled ima sve? Možda se sve svodi na njegovu prošlost i duh izgubljene ljubavi (najmoćniji duh, zar ne?). Hajimi odrasta kao jedinac u vremenu kada nije bilo uobičajeno za japanske roditelje da imaju samo jedno dijete. To ga pretvara u nešto neobično, možda nešto što bismo u (u viktorijanskoj, kolonijalnoj i postkolonijalnoj književnosti) nazvali 'drugi'. Ipak, on uspijeva pronaći nekoga kao on- Šimamoto, djevojku koja je kao i on, jedinica. Zajedno se konačno osjećaju potpunima, ali nažalost izgube kontakt kada im se obitelj razdvoje. Ovo dječje prijateljstvo/simpatija nastavlja progoniti Hajimija. Odjednom, Šimamoto se ponovo pojavljuje, i Hajimi, sada oženjen čovjek, je uhvaćen u mrežu njene tajnovitosti.
Why is this
old love so important to Hajimi? Because it is what itching fingers are to a
painter. Some illustrators/ painters told me they feel it, a need to draw/paint that is almost physical to the point you can actually feel your fingers itching, longing
for a pencil even if you don’t have a clear picture of what you would like to
create in your head. For some people love might be like that. Like that
physical and spiritual need for creation that artists feel. A yearning for the
other than goes deeper that most romantic relationships and perhaps it has nothing to do with the sweetness and tenderness of a romance. It is not so much
sharing and friendship, as a creation of something new. Love, for some, might
be that great mystery. He knows almost nothing about Shimamoto and yet she is essential to him, that only thing that can give him fulfilment and reveal his soul's secrets to him. Hajimi
certainly doesn’t idolize Shimamoto, nor does he sing praises to her. He is well aware that he doesn't know her anymore, but he is at the same time, just
utterly and completely fascinated and drawn to her. It seems like something
that is genuinely stronger than both of them.
Can this connection between them
be read as a metaphor for something else? Certainly it can, as a metaphor for
great many things, but I suppose it is fair to say that it can also be a study of the theme of love itself. This mysterious connection between a
man and a woman opens door to many interpetation. Some even claim that Shimamoto is a metaphor for death. According to that reading, Hajimi is drawn to death itself, i.e. has a longing for a suicide but I don't see it as probable. Sure, Shimamoto might symbolize death, but that doesn't mean she's an embodiment of it. I think that complexity of ther relationship goes further than that. In fact, I don't see anything odd in the fact that Shimamoto might be a methaphor for great many things as well as an actual person in the book. Whether she actually reappears in his life or does he imagines her, well, that's another topic. That would be the premise of this novel. To discover what happens next, you’ll have to read the novel. When you do that, you can draw your conclusions about the characters, the story and the message of this book. For me, one of the best things about this novel is that can be read in so many ways. It is up to us to find a reading that we like best.
Zašto je ova stara ljubav tako važna Hajimiju? Zato što je ona njemu ono što je svrbljenje prstiju slikaru. Neki su mi ilustratori/slikari rekli da osjećaju to, potrebu za crtanjem/slikanje koja je gotovo fizička do mjere da možeš osjetiti da te prsti svrbe, čak i ako nemaš jasnu sliku u glavu onoga što želiš naslikati. Za neke ljude i ljubav može biti takva. Kao fizička i duhovna potreba za stvaranjem koju umjetnici osjećaju. Žudnja za drugim koja ide dublje od većina romantičnih veza i možda i nema nikakve veze s slatkoćom i nježnošću romantike. Nije riječ toliko o djeljenju i prijateljstvu, kao o stvaranju nečega nova. Ljubav za neke, može biti ta velika misterija. On ne zna ništa o Šimamoto, ali ona je za njega bitna, jedina stvar koja mu može dati ispunjenje i otkriti tajne duše. Hajimi svakako ne kuje Šimamoto u zvijezde i ne smatra je savršenom, svjestan je da je više ne poznaje, ali je u isto vrijeme posve opčinjen i privučen njom. Čini je da je to nešto što je doista jače od oboje od njih.
Može li se ta veza između njih čitati kao metafora za nešto drugo? Naravno da može, kao metafora za puno toga, ali mislim da je pošteno reći da može biti i studija ljubavi kao takve. Ova misteriozna veze između muškarca ili žena otvara vrata brojnim tumačenjima. Prema tome tumačenju, Hajimija privlači sama smrt, to jest ima želju za samoubojstvom, ali nekako mi se čini da tome nije tako. Naravno, Šimamoto bi mogla biti simbol smrti, ali to ne znači da je ona njezino utjelovljenje. Nije mi ništa čudno u tome da Šimamoto bude metafora za više stvari, a u isto vrijeme i stvarna osoba u knjizi. Je li se ona stvarno ponovo pojavljuje u njegovom životu ili je on zamišlja? To je već druga tema. To bi bila zamisao ove knjige. Želite li otkriti što se dalje događa, morati ćete pročitati roman. Kada to napravite, moći ćete izvući svoje vlastite zaključke o likovi, priči i poruci ove knjige. Za mene je jedna od najboljih stvari o ovom romanu upravo to što se može čitati na toliko načina.
What I find
so ingenious about this novel is the way it explores numerous question, from
why our past holds such a power over us to why is every human being sentenced
to an isolation of some kind? This book raises questions, rather than answers
them, but it does it so brilliantly, that you feel like the answer must be
attainable. I loved the honesty of this book, the unpretentiousness of its philosophy. At
times, I had a feeling that Murakami was telling me: “I don’t know the meaning
of life and I can’t tell it to you.”, but in some instances I had a feeling I
was seeing it with my eyes, in the story (in art) itself and that it is too
complex a thing to put into worlds in a straightforward way. That is why we
have art. That is why we have literature. To cross the bridges of everyday and
banal worries to get to our cores, and examine them- as painful as it can be at
times.
Ono što mi je toliko genijalno kod ovoga romana je način na koji istražuje brojna pitanja, od toga zašto naša prošlost ima toliku moć nad nama to toga zašto je svako ljudsko biće osuđeno na izolaciju neke vrste? Ova knjiga postavlja pitanja više nego što odgovara na njih, ali to čini tako dobro da imate osjećaj da odgovor mora biti dostižan. Svidjela mi se iskrenost ove knjige, njena nepretencioznost njezine filozofije. Ponekad sam imala osjećaj da mi Murakami govori da ne zna što je smisao života i da ga stoga ne može izreći, ali u nekim trenucima sam imala osjećaj da ga vidim svojim očima, u samoj priči ( u umjetnosti) i da je zapravo previše složen da bi ga se jednostavno izreklo. Zato imamo umjetnost. Zato imamo književnost. Kako bi prešli mostove svakodnevnih i banalnih briga i došli do svojih temelja i preispitali ih- koliko god to bolno ponekad bilo.
Your book reviews are always interesting because of the way you delve into the deeper aspects of the narrative as well as the author's writing style and intentions. It always gives a me a good sense of the story. the only book of Murakami, I've ever read is Norwegian Wood, quite possibly one of his most well know works. While it was not exactly a happy tale, he managed to create a poignant narrative with compelling character with his words. South of the Border, West of the Sun sounds like a book that will give one much pause for thought upon completion. Thanks for sharing yours! Have a lovely new week my friend!
ReplyDeletethank you very much:), I enjoy writing reviews and I'm glad that you like them:).
DeleteE' sempre bello leggere una tua review di un libro, sei capace di far cogliere anche le più piccole sfumature del contenuto!
ReplyDeleteKisses, Paola.
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grazie Paola.
DeleteMurakami has been on my 'to read' list for ages now - and having read your excellent consideration of his work here, I'm definitely going to have to read one of his novels now. I do enjoy the range of your blogging and this review is very good timing for me.
ReplyDeleteI also wanted to say a very belated thank you for your warm words and recommendation of the radio play I co wrote. I was so thrilled that you had listened to it and thank you so much for taking the time to write about it.
No need to thank me, really I ought to thank you because I immensely enjoyed listening to it.
DeleteI wish to read this stuffs. Though I have no time..
ReplyDelete<3 | X ALY | Aly In Wanderland | Giveaway | New Post
Dearest Ivana, this sounds really interesting and makes me want to read. My 'must read' list is getting longer. These authors should be very thankful to you for the recommendations. You do their work justice. So interesting about Hajimi. But it's really just like us a lot of times with that little 'but' is hanging over our heads, thankfully not all the time. So many captivating aspects of your perspective of this book. Makes it even more of a must read for me. That attraction to presumably 'death', the powers our pasts hold over us etc. Deep. Very deep. I generally don't drift towards works like this I'm sold.
ReplyDeleteWhatever happened to your Instagram? Did you get it back? Have a fantastic new week.
http://fashionablyidu.com/
yes, the author made it very easy for us to feel emphatic about Hajimi, even if he is a flawed human being- for aren't we all? I guess I also liked Hajimi because he reminded me of myself, always questioning everything.
DeleteExcellent post (as always)!Thank you very much :) xx
ReplyDelete<3
DeleteThank you dear :D
ReplyDeleteAs you know I'am totally addicted to skin care products. You need to try :D
So lovely draw as usual.
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very good post!
ReplyDelete<3
DeleteI haven't read any of his works yet but I always heard wonderful things, going all the way back into school too. I don't know why I hadn't but I will be shortly. Actually I haven't had much time for reading lately which is something I dearly miss too. I keep saying I'll for it but never do. I love how you mention the joys of a novel that draws you in right from the get-go. It's something I miss most.
ReplyDeleteSxx
www.daringcoco.com
yes, he is a lovely writer. Sometimes it is really hard to find time for reading.
Deleteideal, me encanta!
ReplyDeleteMuchas gracias por tu comentario en mi blog bonita, te espero por mi nuevo post, mil besos!
http://patriciasanchezstylestreet.blogspot.com.es/
<3
Deletelovely drawing <3
ReplyDeletei like your style :)
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<3
DeleteUna review davvero completa e attenta ai particolari!
ReplyDeleteFabrizia - Cosa Mi Metto???
grazie
Deletenice post!
ReplyDelete<3
Deletevery good post
ReplyDeletenew post
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This sounds like a good read as always :) xx
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<3
Deletei have been meaning to read his work for some time now..
ReplyDeleteyour review of his work is beautifully written
thank you very much Hena.
Deletestupendi come sempre :)
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Deletethank you dear Alisa, your comment means a lot to me.
ReplyDelete<3
ReplyDeleteCoinvolgente queste review!
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great draw like always!
ReplyDeletekisses dear
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<3 thank you Carol.
DeleteSei bravissima nelle review dei libri, Ivana!
ReplyDeleteSono talmente complete e particolareggiate che si capisce bene se quel dato libro o autore può piacere o meno!:)
Per quanto mi riguarda, non amo particolarmente Murakami, anche se trovo sempre estremamente interessanti gli scrittori giapponesi!
Mi spiego meglio: ho iniziato a leggere qualche suo libro e mi è anche piaciuto per il tipo di scrittura scorrevole e "calma", però è il tipo di raconto che se lo lascio per un qualche motivo poi difficilmente lo riprendo in mano, insomma non è quel tipo di libro che se salti un giorno stai lì con l'ansia di sapere come continua... spero di esser riuscita a spiegarmi! ^^
Però secondo me è comunque un'auore che andrebbe provato, quanto meno per la piacevole scrittura! :)
Baci!
S
http://s-fashion-avenue.blogspot.it
grazie Silvia<3 sono davvero interessanti molto scrittori giapponesi...hai letto Kazuo Ishiguro? Io lo adoro!
DeleteI'm just discovering Marakami through you.
ReplyDeletei prefer minimalism in writing. Sometimes a writer an have the most beautiful story but told in the most complicated way, t takes away the interest of the reader a bit.
i love the extract you chose to share, I want to read more.
Thank you for sharing this, now i have a new book on my reading list.
Have a lovely week :)
xo
Sauniya | Find Your Bliss ♡
thank you dear<3
DeleteI identified myself with what you wrote and Murakami's lines, dear Ivana! LIke when we grab a book and immediately have a connection with that! I also understand Hajimi and his dissatisfaction. It seems it is part of our lives now, always needing more, wanting something that we can't explain why... and finally, the past comes and is so important, indeed. I also understand the link to Shimamoto... it's really such a great topic - human lives - encounters, satisfaction, loneliness, questions... so many things! I loved your post, I always love your posts! And I hope you have a very nice week, dear Ivana!
ReplyDeleteDenisesPlanet.com
thank you Denise...you're right! Many people feel like that.
DeleteA very interesting post my dear! Murakami is one of the best writers that I look up to. And I guess Sundays are for Murakami. I remember a certain line from one of his short stories which says something like the day goes differently on Sundays. And you are right, his works are definitely not for everybody. There's just too much mystery and beauty in it that may seem odd or too deep for everyone. I have finished a book of his short story collection and watched Norwegian Wood. They are mind blowing and I'm reading IQ84 right now, a novel that he also wrote and it was also somehow on the same page. I actually thought he would socre this year's Nobel Prize for literature as some of my Japanese students are kind of aiming for, which I also do, but well maybe this year isnt his'. His works are surely worth a read but yeah, they're not for the faint at heart hehe
ReplyDeletelove lots,
Tin
mypoeticisolation.blogspot.com
I'm sorry he didn't won that award, he has written so many amazing books.
DeleteFantastic post! Happy new week!:))
ReplyDeletexxBasia
thank you<3
DeleteI haven't ready anything from Murakami (yet) but I'm looking to do it since a few months ago, before they announce its nomination for a Nobel award! They say is one of the best contemporary writers right now so I am really intrigued to put my hands in one of his books! I will tell you my opinion after buying one of his books, even tho I can relay and identify myself with the text you're sharing in this post.
ReplyDeleteThanks as usual for the great recommendations, dear Ivana :D
Pablo
FungiExpress
thank you dear Pablo. I think you would like him....there is something very artistic about his books.
DeleteJa takođe volim Murakamija i veruj mi da se apsolutno slažem sa svakom rečenicom koju si napisala. Uživala sam u tvom viđenju te knjige i njega kao pisca, a posle svakog dela sam pomislila kako je to tako. Kao da si i sama pročitala moje misli i osetila isto što i ja, samo što mislim da ne bih bila u stanju da te rečenice baš tako posložim. Ti si to uradila perfektno! Meni je on primer onih pisaca u čijim delima uvek pronađem neki novi delić same sebe i odgovore koje možda nisam ni tražila, a izgleda da ipak jesam. Uživala sam u ovoj objavi i definitvno mi je jedna od dražih (ako uopšte mogu da se usudim da izdvojim neku) <3
ReplyDeletebaš mi je drago što ga i ti voliš...i hvala ti puno na komentaru.
DeleteI love Murakami so much! And also I love your inspired illustration, Ivana! I said you million times and tell you once more - you are very talented, dear!
ReplyDeletethank you Oksana, you're very sweet.
DeletePredivno si ovo napisala. Obozavam Murakamija i zaista mislim da je draz njegovih dela upravo u jednostavnosti i sanjivosti kojima odise svaki roman, a pritom nosi duboke poruke i navodi na razmisljanje.
ReplyDeleteVeliki pozdrav
hvala ti puno, lijepo si to rekla...dok ga čitaš sve se čini jednostavno i sanjivo, a opet ostane u sjećanju i urežu se te neke dublje poruke.
DeleteDear Ivana, yes, I know it really well, when I know already with the first sentence that I will love a book! And in this context I have mostly immediately the feeling how sad I will be when I ended the book ... But I have to admit that I (as far as I remember) never read a book from Haruki Murakami so far. When I read what you write about his writing style I think this is a fail ... Sundays have this special mood, I know also in this context what you mean. Fortunately during the years it got better but they are still different to other days - what I think is in sum even an advantage as at least these are Sundays :)
ReplyDeleteHave a wonderful rest of the week, dear Ivana!
xx from Bavaria/Germany, Rena
www.dressedwithsoul.com
I agree:)
DeleteI am huge lover of Haruki Murakami!!! I love these books in Sundays and all week long :-). This is superb!
ReplyDeleteI have been not reading this book, but I know others, and especially I like " After dark" and " Przygoda z owcą" ( " the adventure with the sheep"), reading in Polish translation, which is very good. Now I want to read "Sputnik Sweetheart", but of course I have no time... This one about the sheep, very weird, is also about Hokkaido, and I crave to visit this place one day :)
You write beautifully and so passionately about authors and literature, Ivana - it makes me think that there is a future in it for you.
ReplyDeleteIn my 20s, I discovered Haruki Murakami and was mesmerized by his novels. I read all I could find at that point. The connection with Russian writers, jazz and my fascination with Asia were the things that made his writing even more attractive to me - although, of course, more than anything, I cared for the characters he created and their stories. What I loved about those novels, they were not all sad and melancholic with unanswered questions - they were also full of love, kind feelings towards humanity. I really don't know where this author stays these days, what his understanding of life is now. But 15 or more years ago, I just couldn't stop reading and admiring him. So I understand your admiration very well! But I also think that we can overgrow some authors - what fit our soul years ago, sometimes don't fit today. It's not always that some people love and other don't get it. Even within one person's life journey, we can just take different ways from the same starting point.
I also want to compliment his language. And if I remember right, he writes in English, not Japanese - no? Or maybe those few novels were written in English, as I understand he used to live in the US (don't know about his life now). But I read Russian translations, and they were absolutely brilliant!
Much love!
OK, I read an article about him - I mixed up, he translated some great writers from English, but it looks like he wrote in Japanese himself. I'd be curious to read some of his new works.
DeleteIt looks like we really have a similar taste in literature! I love Murakami too :-) but I haven't read yet South of The Border, West Of The Sun. It seem to be georgeous.
ReplyDeletexxxxx Nadine
http://nadinecd.blogspot.co.at