The Wind-up Bird Chronicle
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Average customer review:Product Description
'Mesmerising, surreal, this really is the work of a true original' The Times
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #4006 in Books
- Published on: 1999-04-22
- Binding: Paperback
- 624 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Bad things come in threes for Toru Okada. He loses his job, his cat disappears, and then his wife fails to return from work. His search for his wife (and his cat) introduces him to a bizarre collection of characters, including two psychic sisters, a possibly unbalanced teenager, an old soldier who witnessed the massacres on the Chinese mainland at the beginning of the Second World War, and a very shady politician.
Haruki Murakami is a master of subtly disturbing prose. Mundane events throb with menace, while the bizarre is accepted without comment. Meaning always seems to be just out of reach, for the reader as well as for the characters, yet one is drawn inexorably into a mystery that may have no solution. The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle is an extended meditation on themes that appear throughout Murakami's earlier work. The tropes of popular culture, movies, music, detective stories, combine to create a work that explores both the surface and the hidden depths of Japanese society at the end of the 20th century.
If it were possible to isolate one theme in The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle that theme would be responsibility. The atrocities committed by the Japanese army in China keep rising to the surface like a repressed memory, and Toru Okada himself is compelled by events to take responsibility for his actions and struggle with his essentially passive nature. If Toru is supposed to be a Japanese Everyman, steeped as he is in Western popular culture and ignorant of the secret history of his own nation, this novel paints a bleak picture. Like the winding up of the titular bird, Murakami slowly twists the gossamer threads of his story into something of considerable weight. --Simon Leake, Amazon.com
The Week
`manages to be both surreal and compelling'
The Week
`manages to be both surreal and compelling'
Customer Reviews
Poor Mr Wind-Up Bird
I really enjoyed this book, I loved it, it took me less than a week to finish, I was sad to finish it actually, I wanted it to keep going, but Murakami has this habit of ending stories ambiguously, so you're not sure where the protagonist goes next, or if they're even okay, but I love his work anyway.
The events in The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle are quite haphazard, Okada Toru keeps getting weird calls from some woman he doesn't know, his wife's personality goes all out of whack, he's lost his cat, he meets a death-obsessed sixteen year old, a pair of psychic sisters, a woman who can't stand bad clothes and her son who doesn't talk, a man who was in Mongolia in WWII and spent three days in a well (not by choice)...it all goes mad, and, as his sixeen year old friend always says to him, you can't help but think with every other turn of the page 'Poor Mr Wind-Up Bird'. (That's what she calls him, as a nickname because she says his real name is boring).
It an amazing book by an even more amazing writer, no-one who reads this can possibly speak ill of it, though if you've never read him before, something like 'South of the Border, West of the Sun' or 'A Wild Sheep Chase' may be easier, but even so, one of the most amazing books I've ever read.
Ordinary guy, extraordinary book!
It is hard to describe this extraordinary book that is the story of an ordinary guy whose wife leaves him. Ultimately, it is the story of how Toru finds himself again, but it is his journey that involves many unusual accomplices and their own life experiences, combined with his attempts to understand what's happening through sensory depravation leading to bizarre dreams that makes it a page-turner. This higgledy-piggledy book was at first a challenge, then a delight, but ultimately is slightly unsatisfactory because it's so hard to engage with the hollow shell that is the lead character.
In a word - Brilliant
This is not only Murakamis best book, it is also one of the best books i've ever read. There's not much more I can add to the positive reviews already submitted, they're all spot on.
If you like his other work, you will love this....




