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I've heard many people comment on Haruki Murakami's books before, saying that there are too many sexual descriptions in it, it's a yellow book, almost all of Haruki Murakami's works have sexual descriptions, and many people reject such sensitive things. In fact, not only Haruki Mitsumurakami's books have so many sexual descriptions, but many people have them, which is a common phenomenon in contemporary literature, writers believe that sex is a very essential thing in human nature, and that only by exploring sex in literature can we better explore human nature.
Haruki Murakami's style is deeply influenced by European and American writers, the tone is light, and there is little post-war gloomy and heavy text atmosphere in Japan, he is known as the first pure "post-World War II writer", and is known as the standard-bearer of Japanese literature in the 80s, and his works are widely known around the world. It can be said that Haruki Murakami is an epoch-making writer of Japanese literature, and his works are relatively relaxed compared to other Japanese writers.
I think the Norwegian forests are worth reading. A ** about youth love**, but different from other love**. Naoko and Midoriko, two different types of women, one is the person Watanabe thinks he likes, and the other is the person who is very compatible with Watanabe, whether Watanabe follows his own ideas or follows his heart, obviously Watanabe's powerlessness in the face of love.
In the book, what impressed me the most was death, and many people died one after another.
Growing up in a world full of responsibilities and unpleasantness. Haruki Murakami's protagonists are all young. They don't want to grow up, they think it's incredible to grow up, and they grow up to be squeezed out by death without preparation.
The protagonist even envies the eternal youth of the deceased. This is a young **, the enthusiasm and frankness of the young stage of the growth process, straight to the root of human nature: the bitterness, helplessness, fear, and curiosity of growing up are touching and resonant.
As the author says"Some people will like this one, some people won't"。
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Probably because of my personality.,I like to read idle books.,But I don't like to read the same book a second time.,I don't want to understand the book.,It's probably about people like me.。 So, there is no such thing as a book worth reading 100 times in my case. I've read Haruki Murakami's long stories and his short stories, read his essays, and read his interviews, but when I read Murakami's long stories at an age that I don't understand very well, I always feel that I can't understand them, whether it's "Kafka by the Sea", "1q84", or later "Tazaki Zuo without Color and His Year of Pilgrimage", it's all very long, and I will feel very shocked at the moment after reading it, but there is nothing else, there is no other more post-reading feeling, I have no way to analyze human nature from it, There is no way to retell this story to others, and after a long time, the content will slowly fade away.
I don't like the same feeling after reading, I always feel that reading is a very personal thing, you don't necessarily like what others like, and others don't necessarily like what you like, but everyone should enjoy the process of reading.
In reading Haruki Murakami's works, the one I enjoyed the most should be the essay "When I Talk About Running, What Do I Talk About", I don't remember whether it was a freshman or a sophomore in high school at that time, anyway, when I was in high school, I read this essay, and I became a fan of this Japanese uncle, who thinks that the only important thing to learn in school is that the important things are not learned in school. The words of this book are not so much everyone's memoirs, but rather the nonsense of the running uncle, but this uncle is really cute, and there is no **everyone's frame at all.
He recorded his more than 20 years of long-distance running and long-form ** synchronous growth process in the book, in fact, they are all very positive, for young people in high school, it is a bowl of useful but not greasy chicken soup, but after a few years, I can't remember the content of the book clearly, even so, I still won't read the book from beginning to end.
I like to copy notes when I read books, whether it's a book I like, or a book that I can't understand, maybe I have the skills that most liberal arts students have to organize notes, my reading notes, I have two or three thick books, but in fact, I won't take it out and look at it after I remember those things, I put it down after I wrote it down, and then I sorted out the old things at some point, and then turned them out, and read them carefully and carefully, and some of the places I didn't understand in the past were understood. Some passages that I thought were good in the past feel like that's just like that when I look at them again, there's nothing special. But the mood I felt when I first read that book is still worth tasting 100 times.
Personally, I think that Haruki Murakami's essays and miscellaneous notes are better than **, interested students can read and listen to how this Japanese uncle is babbling.
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As a world-renowned best-selling author, Haruki Murakami has a large number of works, and if he can only choose three books worth reading, the following are my personal recommendations:1"Norwegian Wood":
This is one of Haruki Murakami's most famous works and one of his masterpieces. With the themes of youth, love, death, and growth, it tells the story of the protagonist Watanabe. The plot twists, the themes are profound, and the language is concise and clear, making it well worth reading.
2."The End of the World and the Cold Wonderland": This is a collection of short stories, and each story in it has a mystical and fantastical stare tinged with it.
Each story has its own unique theme and plot, but all reveal Haruki Murakami's usual philosophical thinking and literary style. This book allows readers to appreciate the unique charm of Haruki Murakami. 3.
Assassination of the Knight Commander": This is a relatively unpopular **, but it is one of Haruki Murakami's masterpieces. **It tells the story of the protagonist Tanizaki Qian, and the theme involves love, literature, philosophy and other aspects.
This ** style is romantic, full of poetry, and the plot is compact, and it is a good book that Haruki Murakami should not miss.
1.Highly recommend The End of the World and Cold Wonderland >>>More
1. Although Murakami's structure, writing techniques and language style have obvious traces of Westernization, it is not difficult to find that the depths of his consciousness, interest and emotion are still affected by the "concept of impermanence" impregnated with the philosophy of Buddhism and Zen, the dark view of Japan's inherent beliefs, part of the Confucian moral and ethical outlook, the unity of things and self, and the natural view of joy and sorrow, as well as the resulting sense of melancholy and loneliness, open-mindedness or helplessness. >>>More
No, he didn't understand Murakami's true meaning.
There are a lot of sexual descriptions in "Golden Vase Plum", but it is still a book that has been handed down from generation to generation. >>>More
Haruki Murakami refused to have children in order to protest against the Japanese imperialist Tsinghua, and to demonstrate against his father. His spirit really deserves the respect of each and every one of us.
You're talking about Haruki Murakami in Japan.
Personally, I feel that his ** feelings are more melancholy, and the writing is very delicate, reflecting the emotional confusion and overwhelm of young people in this society. >>>More