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MRP: ₹ 799
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Binding
Hardback
Number of Pages
336
Age Group
All
Language
English
Piracy Free
Secure Transactions
Express Delivery
Eco‑Conscious Packaging
Book Summary
Two debut novels from a celebrated Japanese writer compose this powerful, memory‑laden collection. The central theme traces how memory and friendship shape a life, told with dry humor and a quiet emotional pull. It speaks to adult readers who enjoy literary fiction and translated literature, especially those drawn to intimate, rhythmical storytelling. The tone is reflective, with a gentle sense of adventure found in the smallest moments.
The work presents two standalone narratives that share mood and preoccupations. The voice is spare and direct, moving from a quiet seaside town’s late‑night bar to a Tokyo apartment, and then looping back to the past. The reading experience feels intimate and meditative, with a touch of whimsy as ordinary scenes accumulate into a larger sense of longing. The pacing invites careful reading, rewarding attention to the small, precise details that linger long after the page is turned.
In the first half, the narrator returns home from college, spending nights drinking, smoking, listening to the radio, and wrestling with memories of past loves while pursuing a fragile romance. In the second, years later in Tokyo, he works as a translator and lives with indistinguishable twin girls, yet the Rat remains a stubborn presence from the old town. A short‑lived fixation on a peculiar three‑flipper pinball machine threads through both sections, prompting a search for the exact model that once delighted him. The journey stays grounded in inner life—memory, longing, and the quiet rituals that keep a person moving forward.
After finishing, readers gain a nuanced sense of how memory shapes identity, how friendship endures, and how everyday moments can carry surprising emotional force. The experience builds curiosity about contemporary Japanese fiction, the craft of translation, and the art of quiet, enduring storytelling that stays with you long after the last page.
Product Details
Author
Haruki Murakami
Publisher
Penguin Random House
Number of Pages
336
Language
English
SKU
9780099590392
ISBN
9780099590392
Reading Age
All
Dimensions
12.9x2x19.8cm
Binding
Hardback
MRP: ₹ 799
₹ 680
₹ 119 Off
In 1978, Haruki Murakami Was Twenty-Nine And Running A Jazz Bar In Downtown Tokyo. One April Day, The Impulse To Write A Novel Came To Him Suddenly While Watching A Baseball Game. That First Novel, Hear The Wind Sing, Won A New Writers' Award And Was Published The Following Year. More Followed, Including A Wild Sheep Chase And Hard-Boiled Wonderland And The End Of The World, But It Was Norwegian Wood, Published In 1987, That Turned Murakami From A Writer Into A Phenomenon. In Works Such As The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, 1Q84, What I Talk About When I Talk About Running And Men Without Women, Murakami'S Distinctive Blend Of The Mysterious And The Everyday, Of Melancholy And Humour, Continues To Enchant Readers, Ensuring His Place As One Of The World'S Most Acclaimed And Well-Loved Writers. Jay Rubin (B. 1941) Is An American Academic, Translator, And (As Of 2015) Novelist. He Is Best Known For His Translations Of The Works Of The Japanese Novelist Haruki Murakami. He Has Written About Murakami, The Novelist Natsume Soseki (1867-1916), The Short Story Writers Kunikida Doppo (1871-1908) And Akutagawa Ryunosuke (1892-1927), Prewar Japanese Literary Censorship, Noh Drama, And Japanese Grammar. In May 2015 Chin Music Press Published His Novel The Sun Gods, Set In Seattle Against The Background Of The Incarceration Of 120,000 U.S. Citizens And Non-Citizens Of Japanese Ancestry During World War Ii. Rubin Has A Ph.D. In Japanese Literature From The University Of Chicago. He Taught At The University Of Washington For Eighteen Years, And Then Moved To Harvard University, From Which He Retired In 2006. He Lives Near Seattle, Where He Continues To Write And Translate. Haruki Murakami Was Born In Kyoto In 1949 And Now Lives Near Tokyo. His Work Has Been Translated Into More Than Fifty Languages, And The Most Recent Of His Many International Honors Is The Jerusalem Prize, Whose Previous Recipients Include J. M. Coetzee, Milan Kundera, And V. S. Naipaul. Haruki Murakami Is A World Famous Japanese Novelist. His Many Evocative And Poignant Works Are Focused Around The Themes Of Alienation, Surrealism And Nihilism And Most Are Worldwide Bestsellers. He Has Won The World Fantasy Award, The International Short Story Award, The Franz Kafka Prize And The Jerusalem Prize, Amongst Several Others. An Important Figure In Postmodern Literature, Some Of His Classics Include The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, What I Talk About When I Talk About Running, Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman, Kafka On The Shore. That First Novel, Hear The Wind Sing , Won A New Writers' Award And Was Published The Following Year. More Followed, Including A Wild Sheep Chase And Hard-Boiled Wonderland And The End Of The World , But It Was Norwegian Wood , Published In 1987, That Turned Murakami From A Writer Into A Phenomenon. In Works Such As The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle , 1Q84, What I Talk About When I Talk About Running And Men Without Women , Murakami'S Distinctive Blend Of The Mysterious And The Everyday, Of Melancholy And Humour, Continues To Enchant Readers, Ensuring His Place As One Of The World'S Most Acclaimed And Well-Loved Writers.