bookmate game
Haruki Murakami

After the Quake: Stories

Beri tahu saya ketika buku ditambahkan
Untuk membaca buku ini unggah file EPUB atau FB2 ke Bookmate. Bagaimana cara mengunggah buku?
Amazon.com ReviewHaruki Murakami, a writer both mystical and hip, is the West's favorite Japanese novelist. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Murakami lived abroad until 1995. That year, two disasters struck Japan: the lethal earthquake in Kobe and the deadly poison gas attacks in the Tokyo subway. Spurred by these tragic events, Murakami returned home. The stories in After the Quake are set in the months that fell between the earthquake and the subway attack, presenting a world marked by despair, hope, and a kind of human instinct for transformation. A teenage girl and a middle-aged man share a hobby of making beach bonfires; a businesswoman travels to Thailand and, quietly, confronts her own death; three friends act out a modern-day Tokyo version of __. There's a surreal element running through the collection in the form of unlikely frogs turning up in unlikely places. News of the earthquake hums throughout. The book opens with the dull buzz of disaster-watching: “Five straight days she spent in front of the television, staring at the crumbled banks and hospitals, whole blocks of stores in flames, severed rail lines and expressways.” With language that's never self-consciously lyrical or show-offy, Murakami constructs stories as tight and beautiful as poems. There's no turning back for his people; there's only before and after the quake. --Claire Dederer
From Publishers WeeklyThese six stories, all loosely connected to the disastrous 1995 earthquake in Kobe, are Murakami (The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle; Norwegian Wood) at his best. The writer, who returned to live in Japan after the Kobe earthquake, measures his country's suffering and finds reassurance in the inevitability that love will surmount tragedy, mustering his casually elegant prose and keen sense of the absurd in the service of healing. In “Honey Pie,” Junpei, a gentle, caring man, loses his would-be sweetheart, Sayoko, when his aggressive best friend, Takatsuki, marries her. They have a child, Sala. He remains close friends with them and becomes even closer after they divorce, but still cannot bring himself to declare his love for Sayoko. Sala is traumatized by the quake and Junpei concocts a wonderful allegorical tale to ease her hurt and give himself the courage to reveal his love for Sayoko. In “UFO in Kushiro” the horrors of the quake inspire a woman to leave her perfectly respectable and loving husband, Komura, because “you have nothing inside you that you can give me.” Komura then has a surreal experience that more or less confirms his wife's assessment. The theme of nothingness is revisited in the powerful “Thailand,” in which a female doctor who is on vacation in Thailand and very bitter after a divorce, encounters a mysterious old woman who tells her “There is a stone inside your body…. You must get rid of the stone. Otherwise, after you die and are cremated, only the stone will remain.” The remaining stories are of equal quality, the characters fully developed and memorable. Murakami has created a series of small masterpieces.Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Buku ini saat ini tidak tersedia
142 halaman cetak
Sudahkah Anda membacanya? Bagaimanakah menurut Anda?
👍👎

Kesan

  • nataliaescortesmembagikan kesan6 tahun yang lalu
    👍Layak dibaca
    🔮Kearifan Tersembunyi

    These stories will leave you thinking.

  • miamembagikan kesan3 tahun yang lalu
    🔮Kearifan Tersembunyi

  • giraffamembagikan kesan7 tahun yang lalu
    👍Layak dibaca
    🔮Kearifan Tersembunyi
    💡Banyak pelajaran
    🎯Bermanfaat
    💞Romantis
    🚀Sangat menarik
    🐼Gemas

Kutipan

  • miamembuat kutipan3 tahun yang lalu
    “No matter how far you travel, you can never get away from yourself,”
  • Nuniek Widyantimembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
    ‘Where there’s smoke, there’s fire.’ ”

    “Well, you know what else they say: ‘Where there’s blood, there’s a hard-on.’ ”
  • sekarlangitifymembuat kutipan5 tahun yang lalu
    Our hearts are not stones. A stone may disintegrate in time and lose its outward form. But hearts never disintegrate. They have no outward form, and whether good or evil, we can always communicate them to one another.

Di rak buku

fb2epub
Seret dan letakkan file Anda (maksimal 5 sekaligus)