| The Wind-up Bird Chronicle | 
enlarge | Author: Haruki Murakami Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy New: £3.17 You Save: £4.82 (60%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 68 reviews Sales Rank: 680
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 624 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 4.9 x 1.7
ISBN: 0099448793 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780099448792 ASIN: 0099448793
Publication Date: April 22, 1999 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Amazon.co.uk Review Bad things come in threes for Toru Okada. He loses his job, his cat disappears, and then his wife fails to return from work. His search for his wife (and his cat) introduces him to a bizarre collection of characters, including two psychic sisters, a possibly unbalanced teenager, an old soldier who witnessed the massacres on the Chinese mainland at the beginning of the Second World War, and a very shady politician. Haruki Murakami is a master of subtly disturbing prose. Mundane events throb with menace, while the bizarre is accepted without comment. Meaning always seems to be just out of reach, for the reader as well as for the characters, yet one is drawn inexorably into a mystery that may have no solution. The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle is an extended meditation on themes that appear throughout Murakami's earlier work. The tropes of popular culture, movies, music, detective stories, combine to create a work that explores both the surface and the hidden depths of Japanese society at the end of the 20th century. If it were possible to isolate one theme in The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle that theme would be responsibility. The atrocities committed by the Japanese army in China keep rising to the surface like a repressed memory, and Toru Okada himself is compelled by events to take responsibility for his actions and struggle with his essentially passive nature. If Toru is supposed to be a Japanese Everyman, steeped as he is in Western popular culture and ignorant of the secret history of his own nation, this novel paints a bleak picture. Like the winding up of the titular bird, Murakami slowly twists the gossamer threads of his story into something of considerable weight. --Simon Leake, Amazon.com
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| Customer Reviews: Read 63 more reviews...
A not well structured Murakami novel July 21, 2008 I've read quite a few books of Murakami (Kafka on Shore, after the quake, birthday stories and of course the Wind-up bird) and I consider him to be one of the best novelists out there(along with Paul Auster and Philip Roth). He has an amazing ability to narrate surreal situations in the most natural way, as if these things are happening here and now. He is also a master of bringing feelings and thoughts that we have well-buried inside us to the surface in just a few lines. Kafka is a brilliant example. Each and every word he uses is carefully chosen so as to make the novel like a very tightly woven web. Yet this is done in a seemingly effortless way that the reader (at least I! ) finds refreshing. Having said this, I have to say that the Wind-up bird left me a bit puzzled. I found its structure problematic and overall imbalanced. At some points I kept reading the book with great enthusiasm, but most of the times I kept asking myself "Why is he writing all these things?" I read it until the very end, some 600 pages, slept over it, thought about it after some days, but never found an answer to my question. Yes, it is about alienation, yes he shows how problematic and fragmented relationships can be in our post-modern society. No, he didn't have to spend 600 pages to get across these notions. The fact that it didn't really enjoy the book doesn't deter me from reading more of Murakami. I've now started "South of the border" and it seems to be a delight!
A New experience - So moving !!! July 15, 2008 My son asked for the latest Murakami book for his birthday and I sent it via Amazon - I had never heard of Murakami (he has all of them he says). Then I listened to "The Wind-up Bird Chronicle" as a downloaded 24 odd hour audiobook (The reader was absolutely fantastic by the way and whoever translated the original Japanese must have a fantastic ear for both languages). When I had listened to the last of the story I felt a great sense of loss - I have seldom felt such attachment to the characterisations and mystical atmosphere Murakami has created in this wonderful book - I am trying to reduce the purchases of books as the house is over-flowing with treasures - but I simply need the Printed Book as a special talisman or spiritual object ! Apart from the story the information about Japanese contemporary life is fascinating and wish I knew much more about the culture and language which seems so musical - I have trained in Reiki and knew something about the philosophy of Shinto/Buddism but have never met a Japanese - what an Author - I have to read all of his works (but I'm like that - obsessive).
A literacy masterpiece June 13, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Haruki Murakami produces an excellent written piece about Japanese culture. The novel journeys during the 20th century. In addition it explores the historical events of the country. The story is narrated beautifully, richly descriptive and entertaining. The effect is to increase reader's interest levels and attention.
The author is without any doubts one of the best to emerge from his native Japan. The author's novels are bestselling material. The Wind Up Bird Chronicle proves to be no exception. He has mastered the skill of writing to perfection and whilst reading this novel, it becomes clearly evident. The novel conisist of an interesting and a well defined plot. It focuses on your average Japanese Toru Okada, who lives in the surburbs and leds a life with little to really boost about. He meets bizarre characters through various adventures. These range from ex-soldiers, an unstable teenager, a fashion designer, psychics, a high profiled politicians and mobsters. The themes tackled are wide ranging. These include prosecution, politics, family life, world war and gangsters. The author has incorporated these themes in this marathon 607 page novel. It is an amazing skill and shows he can maintain interest with readers, without being exhausted with ideas . That by no means an easy skill to master.
The Wind Up Bird chronicle provides a real insight about the Japanese culture and its history. It is a well written prose filled with interesting facts, colourful characters and a brilliant setting. Haruki Murakami demonstrates the real qualities of what propels his status as a well respected author around the world. He writes good stories to really entertain readers and arouse interest.
Stretching it somewhat May 17, 2008 Before this, I read Norwegian Wood which is a very well written and moving book. The wind up bird chronicle is more surreal and reminds me somewhat of Garcia Marquez, which is okay if the storytelling is excellent. The book has several story lines going, and not all of them equally interesting. This undermines the urgency of the book and I wonder whether the book wouldn't have been better when the stories about the past of some of the minor characters would have been left out.
Poor Mr Wind-Up Bird May 4, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I really enjoyed this book, I loved it, it took me less than a week to finish, I was sad to finish it actually, I wanted it to keep going, but Murakami has this habit of ending stories ambiguously, so you're not sure where the protagonist goes next, or if they're even okay, but I love his work anyway.
The events in The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle are quite haphazard, Okada Toru keeps getting weird calls from some woman he doesn't know, his wife's personality goes all out of whack, he's lost his cat, he meets a death-obsessed sixteen year old, a pair of psychic sisters, a woman who can't stand bad clothes and her son who doesn't talk, a man who was in Mongolia in WWII and spent three days in a well (not by choice)...it all goes mad, and, as his sixeen year old friend always says to him, you can't help but think with every other turn of the page 'Poor Mr Wind-Up Bird'. (That's what she calls him, as a nickname because she says his real name is boring).
It an amazing book by an even more amazing writer, no-one who reads this can possibly speak ill of it, though if you've never read him before, something like 'South of the Border, West of the Sun' or 'A Wild Sheep Chase' may be easier, but even so, one of the most amazing books I've ever read.
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