What do you think of Haruki Murakami s Norwegian forest?

Updated on culture 2024-04-11
4 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Norwegian Woods: The first book I read was Haruki Murakami's book, it was the first year of high school, just knowing Haruki Murakami, the biggest feeling at that time was that many people died in this book: Kizuki died, Naoko died, Naoko's sister died, Midoriko's father died, and Hatsumi died.

    The only one who walked out of the "forest" was Reiko, and later she really liked Haruki Murakami's books (I really started to like his books because of "Silence"), and I read "Norwegian Wood" a few times. At that time, there was a new discovery. In a word, it can be summed up as:

    Only Murakami could write such a book. The protagonist is also a young person, so there will be a lot of resonance - those resonances that he once had but now forget, even forgetting the forgetting itself, and what he did not have. Whether you have it or not, it will resonate after watching it.

    This feeling is perhaps something that only Murakami can resort to.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Wandering in loneliness, feeling in hesitation and confusion, not angry, not complaining, and facing an unpeaceful life in peace. Everything is real, and it's all illusory. The story is your own, and it can be someone else's.

    The story can be like this, or it can be different. It's always lonely or your own... Look at your lonely life with your own eyes...

    The dead silence after the noise, only I know best.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Norwegian Wood" wants to express self-redemption and loneliness.

    What Haruki Murakami tells us is that life needs to be experienced. Only by experiencing love, pain, and spiritual baptism will we grow and understand what those who have experienced more want to tell us.

    The human heart, the mind, is truly a wonderful gift from God. In fact, what Murakami wants to tell us is nothing more than the history of people's spiritual growth and people's spiritual choices.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Norwegian Forest is one of Haruki Murakami's masterpieces, and it is mainly the theme of human beings losing their freedom and authenticity due to social pressure, restraint and narrow-mindedness. **, Haruki Murakami makes the reader feel this emotional depression in the storyline through the journey of the protagonist, the peaceful, introverted, and sensitive Kafka Tamura, in the unusually cold Norwegian jungle. Through the vast scenes in the book, Haruki Murakami shows in a unique way the gradual loss of self by individuals in this society, and emphasizes that under such social pressure, people should maintain their desire for freedom and respect for themselves.

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