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Norwegian Wood is Haruki Murakami’s internationally acclaimed novel, published in English with a stylish new cover. Compact and travel-friendly, it’s a deeply emotional story of love and loss set in 1960s Japan, boasting over 22,000 reviews and a 4.4-star rating. Perfect for millennials craving literary depth and cultural resonance on the go.
| ASIN | 0099448823 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 5,145 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 16 in Language Training by Language 72 in 20th Century Historical Romance (Books) 438 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (22,173) |
| Dimensions | 12.85 x 2.54 x 19.84 cm |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 9780099448822 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0099448822 |
| Item weight | 278 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 389 pages |
| Publication date | 1 Jan. 2003 |
| Publisher | Vintage |
W**N
Bought on Web Recommendation
What a stunning book. I purchased this as a plane read as I had so often seen it cropping up on lists of great books. Admittedly when I placed the order I was in two minds on whether or not I was looking forward to this read but on opening the book and starting it I was enraptured. Murakami has a certain way with words that had me completely swept up in the story; there are few characters for such a large book but those that appear are incredibly lifelike. At heart Norwegian Wood is a drama revolving around how our two characters live after the death of a teenage friend and lover. As a male in my mid-20's that didn't sound so appealing but I was converted by a journey which is sad, funny and overall enthralling. There are no sensational show downs, no masked madman on the loose, but there is a very sweet relationship that twists and turns throughout the book causing you to occasionally need to put the book down in order to allow the emotion to sink in. I don't mind saying that on a packed return flight I had tears in my eyes whilst I played Norwegian Wood.
A**R
interesting and touching story
Worth reading. A light magical trip along the path of innocent love found lost and found again in the 60’s..
D**H
Brilliant book
Whether you've heard of Murakami or not, his books are on a whole different level. Philosophical, relaxing, and a joy to read. Jazz is mentioned in his books quite often but the only way to properly explain how the narratives make you feel is like imagining you are in a cafe with relaxing music in the background like lo-fi, chillout or even jazz while sipping coffee or hot chocolate in the middle of winter. Pure bliss! This book is no different; the narrative flows smoothly and it is told from the protagonist's perspective during his student days at uni. He goes through various emotions and a journey to self-discovery when he falls in love with 2 completely different women in terms of their views, personality and mentality; each of whom he meets at different stages in his life. I definitely recommend this book and any other book that you can get your hands on written by Haruki Murakami, you will not be disappointed.
A**R
Loved it
It’s the first book of Murakami that I read. I really loved it and I’m certainly going for another one of his. It’s a book full of sounds, pictures, music of another era that leaves you with a nostalgic feeling, a bitter sweet melancholy even if you have not experienced those times.
M**A
Not my cup of tea
Not as good as South of the border west of the sun. It was ok.
T**R
I waited and it was worth every word
How long have I waited to read Norwegian Wood? Years. But never got round to doing so. Now that I have, I realise that rather than wasting time not reading this wonderful book, I have savoured the delights of Murakami's exquisite writing because I waited. A story that weaves youth and love and loss and sensuality, against a backdrop of Tokyo, Japan. How I would love to travel back in time to 1968 Tokyo. A beautiful book, with so many messages, lessons and things to learn and admire. Everyone should read Norwegian Wood.
M**D
A bit of a sexual fantasy?
I can understand why this was the author's breakthrough novel: it's about relationships and sex. The young protagonist is tied in knots over relationships over attractive women who - to various degrees - love him and are sexually available. It feels a bit too like a male fantasy, but it's a little bit deeper than that.
R**E
A different kind of love story
This is the first novel written by Murakami which I have read. I greatly enjoyed the book and absorbed its 386 pages in just a 24 hour period. I hade first read Novelist as a Vocation, which encouraged me to discover his writing style. Although Norwegian Wood is less typical of Murakami's writing style, I felt well immersed in Japanese culture from that era, set 50 years ago. I found it interesting to compare with that of Britain at a similar time, as I am the same age as the author.
P**N
Murakami is someone I've never fully embraced, yet keep coming back to. I don't like some of the fantastic and surreal elements of his writing, but I'm also drawn by the energy, intelligence, and inventiveness of it. And I also love how he infuses his work with elements of Western culture, especially music. Norwegian Wood is a straight-on story about love and loss, and coming of age. It's not cluttered by any surrealism or fantasy. And it's loaded with musical references to classical and jazz, as well as the Western rock music of the late sixties. (As the title would suggest.) Thus, Norwegian Wood was exactly the right Murakami book to pick up next, the one book to push me further into his work. It tells the story of Toru Watanabe, a college freshman living in Tokyo. Like many young men his age, he doesn't know what he wants to do with his life, and majors in drama for no real reason. And like many men his age, women both complicate and clarify things. He has relationships with two completely different women: the troubled and introspective Naoko and the outgoing and spunky Midori. Naoko poses the most trouble for Toru for many reasons. First, she's the ex-girlfriend of Toru's best friend in high school, Kizuki, who committed suicide at 17. Kizuki's death had a major impact on both friends. For Naoko, she lost not just a boyfriend, but someone she had known since childhood, someone who had become almost a part of herself. For Toru, his friend's suicide changed his perspective on life, filling everything with the taste of death. `Death is not the opposite of life, but a part of it', becomes his new motto. So when Toru and Naoko meet again, accidentally, on the subway, there's a connection, but a troubled one. The ghost of Kizuki hangs over them. They begin with odd walks through the city, Toru trailing Naoko like a puppy. But eventually a form of love develops. Once things eventually come to a head on her 20th birthday, their relationship becomes further complicated as Naoko runs away to a kind of sanatorium in the mountains over Kyoto. Months pass before Toru even knows where she's gone, and he lives in a sort of limbo, going to school, working at a record store. Waiting. Meanwhile, he meets Midori, a fellow drama student. They form an immediate bond, though she has a boyfriend and has her own problems with her troubled family life, including a father dying of brain cancer. They become fast friends, and Toru finds himself attracted to her despite the pain he still feels at the loss of Naoko. Of course, Naoko muddies the waters again by writing him to tell him where she is and inviting him to visit. There he meets Naoko's roommate, Reiko, an older woman with a talent for music. The three spend much time sitting around while Reiko plays guitar for them, including Naoko's favorite song, Norwegian Wood. In a sense, Reiko becomes the third woman in Toru's life, because she is open, and they develop a friendship in his short time there. With Naoko, he learns some more about her issues, but just enough happens to keep him connected to her, not enough to resolve their love. He is still in a limbo. Murakami teases the frustrations of this state out of Toru. Toru agonizes over his dilemma, stuck between a woman he loves but can't have and a great woman he can have. Midori begins to fall for him and pressures him. But he's waiting for something to happen. Of course, something does. But then what? Has he waited too long? This is a great story, but it is further strengthened by great characters. Besides Toru and Midori, whose honest, straight-forward manners combine with deep vulnerabilities to make them both irresistible, Murakami fills the landscape with great supporting actors as well. Reiko steals each scene she walks into. Toru's anal roommate "Storm Trooper" makes for some good laughs, and is a great source of conversation for Toru. Nagasawa is a privileged student of an elite university who is drawn to Toru through a shared love of Western literature and uses his influence to help Toru out of a few jams. Yet his arrogance and womanizing also adds a layer of complexity to the friendship, as these traits both compel and repulse Toru. The characters really make this book hard to put down. Norwegian Wood is a great read and will definitely keep me on the path to reading more Murakami.
S**A
While on a flight to Germany and while landing, the writer happens to listen to the song "Norwegian Wood" by Beatles.The wonderful song would have raised and must have elated the moods of all the other passengers on board listening to the pleasant, musical,soothing,lyrics ,but for the writer Murakami of "Norwegian Woods",as being narrated that the song always reminded him of his shuddering past,an unforgettable memory and a saddened truth which can't be erased from his memory.By the above we may conclude initially that it looked as if we are reading a sad story of someone whose thoughts are linked with the song.It also looked as if we are reading an autobiography of the one who has written the lines,until denied by the writer. himself. Murakami starts the book,"Norwegian Wood " with an exceptional beginning by picking up a popular Beatles song, titled,"Norwegian Wood",while putting life into the characters of the book simultaneously, filling with feelings and emotions, bringing out wonderful description of nature around,meadows,past memorable memories and the city of Tokyo, during the period 1968-70.The vivid description of dorms,universities,porn and students unrest etc are also brought out with such an impact that as a reader ,we have a feeling of witnessing the same in the present.As we continue reading, we learn that the lines above are thoughts of the protagonist, in the book'Thoru Watanabe' and the song "Norwegian Wood" by Beatles,was the favorite song of his beloved 'Naoko'.But then,to say the book as an ideal love story is also wrong,because on the one hand you read about the intense love,passion,emotions & feelings between Thoru Watanabe and Naoko(who is his best friend, Kizuki' s girl friend), but on the other hand we also witness the same intense relationship between him and,his other girlfriend, Midori and which is no less as close.Besides,we also come across about the physical relationship between Reiko and Watanabe(after the death of Naoko & who also happens to be a roommate & close friend of Naoko at the rehab sanctuary). We also read, the multiple flings of Watanabe with other girls, along with his friend Nagaswa while at dormitory and during their college days etc makes the feeling strong that the book is not an ideal love story though it's hard to keep the feeling aside at many a places, which is an incredible art by the writer to keep the intrest of the readers.With the number of deaths in the story by suicides (Kizuki,Hatsumi,Naoka),the frequent failure of love between(Toru Watanabe with Naoka and Midori, & Nagasawa with Hatsumi) ,an happily married life ending into divorce due to an unfortunate rumor (Reiko's ending up in a rehab) makes the story sad and tragic.With out doubt these things on the part of the reader - I.e. the subtle feeling of autobiographical part,the love story part, and the sad & tragic part intrigues us.The takeaways from the book are the strong and unflinching friendships that exist between different characters.,the mention of Beatles songs and books like Great Gatsby,which are skillfully clubbed with the story.Though it's not a suggestion to listen to the song of Beatles or read the book ,but definitely most of the readers may endup doing so if not done earlier,just out of curiosity. The charecter of Toru Watanabe for eg, as a caregiver to Midori's father while giving her a break touches us near to the heart.Then complimenting Midori for her cuteness with words like "So cute that the Mountains crumble and the Oceans dry up,"etc brings out the wit in him ,the replies that comes from Thoru Watanabe,and also being a favorite and being liked by every other charecter in the book goes down long with the reader.Similarly, the mention of Storm Trooper and his habits of being a perfectionist bring a lot of laughter.Above all,both the writing by Murakami and the translation by Jay Rubin are outstanding..
H**E
Konusu
L**Y
This book may have been the best book I've read in my 19 years of life. (And I've read a lot, i love reading) I cannot describe why it's so beautiful. It's something you have to give a try, to understand how peak this is.
A**R
An absolutely stunning book. I read this book in one sitting. I couldn't put it down. I'm normally a cynic when it comes to love stories, and I think this is the only love story to have ever moved me and evoke a whole lot of emotion inside of me that I'm not used to feeling. I loved that Murakami's writing is lyrical and effortless, and the book is heart-warming and strangely romantic, but heartbreaking at the same time. It made me smile/laugh one minute and cry the next. I couldn't reason 100% with the main character's choices at the end, but I think it's unfair to assume everyone would make the same decisions in life etc., and I absolutely loved that it didn't have a "happy ending". Is the story predictable? Sure, maybe, in some ways, but in life everyone is predictable. It's the journey that doesn't make it predictable, and Murakami made that journey for me an incredibly enjoyable one. It is very melancholic, though, and I did find one of the characters annoying, so if you're into books where everything is perfect and has a happy ending, and if you have to love all the characters in the book to love the book, Norwegian Wood isn't for you. It also isn't the book for you if you aren't into thinking about life/death or other depressing things, or if you're not into reflecting about people or the human condition. Also, based on reading the other reviews, it seems it makes a difference if you have an awareness of the Japanese culture, i.e. people who aren't acquainted with Japanese culture don't seem to like this novel as much as Murakami's other novels. I appreciated this novel a lot and everything in it made sense to me, but I am intimately acquainted with the culture. I suppose a lot of people don't, simply because they don't understand the way Japanese people work/think/talk, so they might find it unnatural and find it hard to understand the decisions the characters make or how they speak. But overall, an amazing book and one that I suspect will stay with me for a while.
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