How to understand Haruki Murakami s Kafka by the Sea?

Updated on amusement 2024-05-08
8 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    After reading "Kafka by the Sea" and reading the book review, I know that the author Haruki Murakami has deep intentions. The story of the two parallel lines, although I am sometimes confused to watch, but I can't stop it. In that sense, it's a good book.

    As a puzzle for the whole book, rather than the last chapter, Chapter 32 "Return to Normal Nakata" is more appropriate. In terms of characters, I prefer Nakata, who is always surrounded by unusual things, and the way Nakata speaks, thinks, and sees things, rather than Kafka, who is emotionally intertwined with the three women. Not only is he a fun and lovely old man, but also an old man who can bring me to think about life.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The teenager searches for himself, in the absurdity of reality, while escaping his fate. It is a process of rebellion and acceptance, and after finally accepting the absurd reality, Kafka finally finds his meaning. And Murata, a person who lives absurdly in the eyes of ordinary people, is really living in reality.

    The other world on the mountain is Kafka's inner world, and Oshima can be seen as the one who leads the protagonist to discover his inner self. In my heart it represents a strength, a choice, a kindness, a lamp that lights up my rebellion, and a beautiful memory that I will never forget when I was 15 years old.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Of the few books I've read, Kafka by the Sea is probably the one that influenced me the most and was my favorite. I think it was probably because I had just finished my growth when I read this book, so it resonated. He made me realize that I was not the only one who had this experience, Kafka-kun was like my partner, and even Haruki Murakami was like me, we all went through some things and chose to live strongly.

    So let me understand the story in this way and love it.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Just look at it as an ordinary story, Murakami is not a god, and he is not an oracle written by him. I think many of Murakami's books are written too mysteriously at the beginning, and then they can't finish the end casually, but fortunately, his writing can cover it up. Although I'm actually still a fan of Murakami.

    When you read Kafka's book, you will have the illusion that you are following your feelings in a daze, and the metaphors and purposes of life will be dramatically and automatically revealed. But you should also know that real life is not like this, and this kind of gap is quite uncomfortable.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The author himself thinks it is necessary to write a preface, after all, it is the first time to write with a young man as the protagonist, or a strong Murakami flavor, regardless of behavior and words, and this is a teenager who returns to the original world with his own and with the help of the people around him, defeats the darkness, and returns to the warmth and beauty, the two story lines are also very well connected, and I miss Nakata and Hoshino, Kafka and Saeki, father Jonny Walker, Oshima, especially Hoshino, Hoshino's grandfather's influence on him, those characters I am familiar with and their stories.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    It's worth it, you should be able to feel it from my name, the impact of this book on me, the peculiar thinking, the clever words, and the inner fluctuations and emotional thinking of the teenager, which resonated with me, and felt a positive direction in my darkest period, and for Haruki Murakami, reading him is more like an inner monologue, always reminding me of the existence of scars. In short, loneliness is a peculiar existence, tormenting you, but not defeating you.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Haruki Murakami's theme is: No matter how bad and difficult the outside world is, I must also be strong, not the same as the dirt, live unscrupulously, and be tenacious, for the living and the dead, live. "Kafka by the Sea" is Haruki Murakami**, who interprets this theme to the extreme.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The rebellious boy who was ignorant of the world finally understood acceptance and obedience at the end of the trip. He eventually became "the toughest fifteen-year-old in the world."

    Along the way, he was accompanied by his own consciousness, worked hard to train himself, and stubbornly resisted fate. But behind this effort, behind all this rebellion and smugness, fate is still pulling the reins. A teenager who resists fate but has to follow the arrangement of fate, Haruki Murakami uses all of this to build a surreal fairy tale**.

    Not every teenager will have such a bizarre fate as that teenager, and not everyone will find the arrangement of fate, let alone all these things that will happen for a person to experience fate and see it clearly. However, this is **, this is surrealism, everyone finds their own shadow in it, everyone gets comprehension, and everyone finds themselves through Murakami's words.

    Prophecy always appears like a dark and mysterious waterhole.

    Usually quietly lurking in a place that no one knows, once the time comes, it will pour out silently, soaking every cell in your body with cold cold. You are dying in a brutal flood, struggling in agony. You clutch to the vents near the ceiling, begging for fresh air outside.

    However, the air you breathe in from there is almost ** dry and scorching your throat hot. Water and thirst, cold and heat, the elements that should be opposed, Shin Dou Sen come at you in unison.

    As vast as there is space in the world, there is no room for you, albeit a little bit, but nowhere else. When you seek a voice, there is only silence; When you seek silence, there is an uninterrupted stream of prophecy. From time to time, the voice flipped a secret switch hidden somewhere in your head.

    Your heart is like a river that rises after a long rain. The ground marked that there was nothing left of the river and rushed to a dark place. And the rain was still pouring down on the river.

    Whenever you see that kind of flood on the TV news, you think, "Yes, that's right, that's my heart."

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