Murakami s book lovers What exactly do Murakami like?

Updated on culture 2024-05-11
23 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    It is a reflection on life.

    It's not didactic, there's no imposition on it, just reading and reading, and you will feel that it will gradually resonate with your own experience and feelings. Everyone's resonance points are different, but most of the people who can find resonance in Murakami's books are actively or passively thinking about life while experiencing it.

    If you want to see the excitement of the storyline, maybe Murakami's story is not the best, and the language is sometimes not concise enough. But only in this way, from those plain narratives, the resonance that is clear like a cocoon is more charming. At different ages and at different stages of life, looking back and re-reading Murakami's books, sometimes I have different feelings.

    This is amazing, at a time when most ** are fast food, Murakami's story is worth reading many times.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    It can only be understood, but not spoken.

    Suggest a place to read a book, a train car to a distant place, and that's the best place to experience his books, or a balcony in the morning or evening, and I say this, maybe you get the idea.

    Feel with your most sensitive heart His books will be the most useful antidote and food for the soul.

    As the saying goes, the pilgrimage is a long journey, and when you really experience it, I'm sure Mr. Murakami will be pleased.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The kind of atmosphere in which he writes books is a waste of ......Authentic and gives a good feeling ......

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    It is recommended to see the Strange Bird Row.

    That's great!

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    In "Norwegian Wood", in a small wood, it is written very implicitly, but it is actually the part where the heroine helps the male protagonist, which I think is very real.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The first time I liked Murakami was in the mid-90s, in Hao Fang's Ark Bookstore, I bought a few copies of the Li River version of "The End of the World and Cold Wonderland", Sheep Hunting, and Norwegian Forest. At that time, this was considered a pioneer behavior (at that time, Hao Fang's bookstore was full of rock culture, counterculture, punk** and the like). But when I returned to my hometown of Changsha for the Chinese New Year, I found a high school classmate who also liked Murakami.

    At that time, it was really nice to meet another reader in Murakami. It's like standing on the street with a lot of people, but we're from another world. It's a bit of a scene in The Matrix, hehe.

    Later, the Norwegian forest was on fire, and there were more and more petty bourgeoisie and literary young people who loved to listen to jazz and enjoy a little IKEA-like material life. At this time, if you say that you are a Murakami reader, there seems to be nothing unusual at all, and you will not have a sense of closeness to anyone because of the same label.

    They said it well, Murakami's things actually have a lot of connotations. For example, "The End of the World and Cold Wonderland" seems to be regarded as a cyberpunk by foreigners. This **, I was dizzy after watching it for the first time, and after reading it for the second time, I knew that Murakami was doing a brain test.

    Taking a number of philosophical concepts apart and putting them together is probably similar to programmer programming.

    1q84, I think compared to "Strange Birds", it seems to have regressed. It's "Tokyo Strange Tales", and there is something new. A writer who has been writing for so many years will always repeat himself.

    It's so big, it's estimated that it's difficult to make much progress and breakthroughs, but fortunately, Murakami's level hasn't dropped.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    This "all" is used, and I can't help but feel that I have to say something very suitable, "It's a fool to make generalizations".

    Murakami is also a very rich ** author, so the readers should be richer.

    He has a lot of different works, of course, there are good things, and there are many debatable points. But his readership is at least an order of magnitude larger.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Haruki Murakami's works vary greatly, some people like "Pachinko in 1973" but can't stand "Kafka by the Sea", and some people praise "The End of the World and Cold Wonderland" and therefore treat "1q84" as garbage. More people enjoy his medium-length stories and stay away from the neuroticism of his short stories.

    So, if someone likes most or all of Haruki Murakami's work, the commonality is obvious: tolerant, dedicated.

    1. Love to write.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    It's all a bit hypocritical. There are some people who are nihilistic and vigorous, and some people like superficial rhetoric. "The World" is a very good work, with a new structure and a strong sense of exploration; And the absurdities in "Strange Birds" and "Sheep" are also very good; Works such as "Norwegian Wood", "Kafka by the Sea", and "Dance" have a strong sense of nihilism.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    I'm not sure about your question、Well, if you look at 1q84 first, it's a bit of a cup.、It's too new to understand.。 It is recommended that you read Lin Shaohua's translation first. Norwegian forests, etc., are preceded by a translation preface.

    Or "Listening to Haruki Murakami", a similar biography. Murakami was born in 49 years and married Yoko Takahashi at the age of 22. Always single-minded.

    And love cats. After graduating, he opened the Peter the Cat Jazz Bar. Didn't think to write**.

    But at 29 o'clock, I suddenly wanted to write ** when I was in baseball, and as soon as I wrote it, I won the award. It was "Let's Listen to the Wind", and then wrote "Pachinko in 1973", which sold very well. So the bar was sold for professional creation.

    Every book is a best-selling spectacle. He is low-key, quite low-key, generally does not accept interviews, and loves to run. I think ** is written on the premise of good physical strength.。。。

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Does he like Yasunari Kawabata? Although Haruki Murakami is a Japanese writer, he has a preference for American literature. Among the village chief's favorite American writers were Scott Fitzgerald, Lemond Chandler, Truman Capote, Stephen King, and Kafka.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Fitzgerald, the writer who wrote The Great Gatsby.

    Kafka, the one who wrote The Metamorphosis.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Favorite Fitzgerald!

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Boys who like Haruki Murakami may be more gentle, literary and artistic, and their minds are more delicate, and the girls they like are better to have the same hobbies as him, and their personalities are not too hot, but it's better to have a common language with him, and they can discuss books with him.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    You've said he likes Haruki Murakami, is it likely that he likes someone else?

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Men for the first time. It's a memory for a lifetime! Above! Above! Above!

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    In Norwegian Forest, 4.3 million copies were sold in Japan, the second in history at the time, the first was it, I forgot who sold 7 million copies, and many of his works were translated into foreign languages and distributed overseas, although he did not win the Nobel Prize in Literature, but his influence did not overwhelm them, and his works were of many genres, such as discussions** ** Essays, interviews, and even translations are the most popular in China** **The genre is also very different in style, love, family, friendship, and even the relationship between strangers and strangers, homosexuals, and there are love** The most popular personal opinion is the Norwegian Forest, Sputnik Lovers, and Kafka by the sea.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Of course, the influence is big enough.

    His work is about love, but it's not a particularly strong story, a very intense kind, but a slow description in slow language, with a very petty bourgeois feeling, even if it's about sex, it's very stable, and people who don't know how to evaluate it after reading it.

    It's nice to have some clips or details.

    The most famous is "Norwegian Wood", and I also like "The Good Wind".

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    1 There is no need to talk about influence in his works, but to write about people who need them.

    2 Pure literature.

    3 Norway's forests are multi-point in line with reality. Personally, I especially like Kafka by the sea and the dance.

    How I haven't forgotten what I love the most. What about the sheep man, no one mentioned it... I like that satellite lover too. Strange Bird is not as good as the cold Wonderland Strange Bird is my least favorite of his long stories.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    1.The influence is crazy, the best candidate for the Nobel Prize (God willing, this year Murakami).

    2.Love? are you kidding?Love is just one of them, and the main thing is to explore the meaning of life, the nature of loneliness, the origin of evil, and so on. Belongs to pure literature.

    3."Norwegian Wood" is good, but it falls short in some ways. Personally, I think that "Dance! Dance! Dance! "Strange Bird Shapes" and "Kafka by the Sea" are good.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    The influence is huge, and the sales without any publicity are surprising, and the influence exceeds that of Yasunari Kawabata and Yukio Mishima.

    Yes loved the Norwegian forest, it made me fall in love with Murakami.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    His work is a pleasure to watch, but the most recent "After Dark" has no of his past style, like the work of a second-rate writer. I still like his "Let's Listen to the Wind".

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    Let's follow the trend, maybe it's to catch the trend.

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