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S**I
"super-frog saves Tokyo"
Absolut.ely a great story. Perfect
G**E
Another good resource for used books.
these particular used books difficult to find at local used bookstores or my usual online sources.. These arrived as advertised, totally readable, unmarked. already being consumed. Usual timely shipping, faster than my reading.
M**Y
The best short story author of all time?
I'm afraid to say that this book will be a classic because that turns people off of some books -- but this book is a classic of the short story genere. If you have never read Murakimi, you might think that reading a translated work by a great Japanese author is something that you ought to do, rather than something that you will enjoy. Sort of like yoga or ordering a healthy vegetarian concoction rather than a nice juicy steak. The opposite is true, this is great literature because he effortlessly grabs your attention and keeps it for the whole story. Just when you think you have the author figured out he sneaks up behind you and whaps you over the head with a completely different angle, making you question just about everything you ever thought that you knew. The last story even made me cry, which not many stories do and certainly not other stories by this author. Every story should be read many times, or at least I find that I do. I frequently reread stories from "The Elephant Vanishes" and plan to do the same with this one.In some reviews I find that people overanalyze the books; don't forget that just because the author is writing in the first person doesn't mean that the author is presenting the hero as somebody who you should emulate. If you spot a character flaw, with an author of this caliber it is pretty likely that you were intended to -- and if you read it again you might question your assumptions.This is the first book I have bought on a Kindle and I'm not too sure about the experience. With this author you should probably get the physical book so you can reread the stories. Also, the book is a bit smaller than I expected.This book was a nice antidote to the "Girl with the Dragon tattoo" that I finished reading just before.
D**P
Haunting ... enchanting ...
Two people look at the night sky. One sees darkness and dots of light. Another sees a thousand marvels.As the shock of an earthquake wears off, a sort of soul-quake takes place. After all, if we can't rely on the ground under our feet to remain solid, what can we be certain of? Sometimes we KNOW that in the brain, but it takes an earthquake or terrorist attack for us to FEEL it in the gut -- for the knowing to be meaningful.Something intangible but essential shakes loose in the people of Japan weeks after the Kobe earthquake. Like the rock mantle that once covered Kobe, neglected souls have liquefied. Now change is possible. For some, that means healing. For one, it means, not just losing, but unknowingly giving away his...soul(?). Another meets a heretofore hidden aspect of his Self. I guess it depends on what had been important in their lives and where they were headed before.The stories are told gently, subtly and with respect. A writer's self-inflicted chains are broken and he finds his freedom. A dumpy, overly modest, milquetoast doormat of a man finds his true power. With the help of a guru/limo driver, a rock of hatred that even the soul-quake left intact is only now able to be recognized and dealt with.I wouldn't presume to discuss Mr. Murakami's use of metaphor and allegory. I think each reader will find what s/he needs to find. ("When the student is ready....") That's one reason I'll be reading this book again soon: There's much to be found.AFTER THE QUAKE, I suggest, is best read slowly and often, with soft and open awareness; it's to be contemplated upon.
C**1
Journey Without A Destination
I relish Murakami’s approach to the short story, in part for the unintentional (I believe) absurd humor, the lack of any obvious moral lesson, and the unexpected, sometime fantastical action. This series is clever in weaving together separate stories that are all peripherally attached to a cataclysmic event which impacts the characters in very different, indirect ways. I also love the tie to Japanese locations, sensibilities, and culture. These are always interesting trips with twists that are difficult to anticipate. In reading several together, however, it became apparent that the male protagonist is frequently described in similar ways - non-athletic, not particularly handsome, a bit of an academic underachiever, seemingly without taking any particular joy for their lot in life but not deeply depressed either - perhaps a relatable Everyman in some sense. The characteristics repeat. Is this the soul of certain kind of Japanese male, the kind that might or might not end up in suicide forest. The descriptions of female characters always seem to focus in part on physical attractiveness, or the lack thereof and occasionally a peek into their interiors. Other than those nits, the stories grip the reader with anticipation which may remain unrequited, and yet fulfilling.
R**G
Brilliant
Probably the best collection of stories I have ever read. A couple I have read before and I really don’t understand how the same stories keep reappearing! However when they are so thought/provoking a re-reading really helps. Thank you Haruki, your talent has really enriched my life.
A**.
Murakami is always good
Small booklet but up to expectations! Murakami never fails
I**C
Beautiful
All the stories are so beautiful written around main theme of the book 'Earthquake' . Life goes on even as mother nature gets angry sometimes.Murakami does magic with words. Even the superficial characters in his stories are so humanized that you don't even realise the difference.Beautiful stories..ma must read if you are a Murakami fan
A**Z
Ground-shaking narrative
I must confess that I hadn't bought and read this book because I thought it was a chronicle; so, great was my surprise when I found a collection of short stories as marvellously written and mind-blowing as all Murakami's works have proved to be. Of course, the leif motif that gives rise to it is the 1995 Kobe earthquake that left open wounds in the Japanese imagery for the decades to come. In spite of this common characteristic, the stories presented range from the most disparate possible sources: a recently separated man, a young woman who doesn't know what to do with life, a delusional man who can't tell whether he contributed to save Tokyo from another earthquake (just to mention some). A continuum of uncertainty between what is thought to be real and what is thought to be a dream, after the quake is a magnificent to choice to puzzle oneself while reading it.
S**O
Never desapointing
Mi third Murakami read, once again, inside this surreal universe of familar places in Tokio, and Japan the reader would prabably never visit and yet get to know so well...
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