Reviews for After Dark (Vintage International)

After Dark (Vintage International) by Haruki Murakami Summary and Reviews

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Book Reviews of After Dark (Vintage International)

Book Review: Murakami Returns
Summary: 5 Stars

After the last few efforts from Haruki Murakami I was starting to think that he had already peaked with his earlier efforts such as the Wind Up Bird Chronicle, Wild Sheep Chase, and Hard Boiled Wonderland, or that I'd begun to get tired of his style and work. After Dark was a positive revelation for me that Murakami still has the poetic surrealism from his finest work, and has me waiting in anticipation for more. It's not quite his best, but better than anything else I've read recently, and a good taster for anyone who hasn't read his works. His collection proudly retains its place on book shelf of favourite authors.

Book Review: A letdown
Summary: 2 Stars

This is Murakami's slightest offering yet, and a big disappointment. He tries out a new narrative technique in which he uses the third person present voice. This comes across as highly contrived, referring to the narrative point of view as an actual presence, or "a camera". It's like he's writing shooting notes for a film. I really hope that we get another Murakami novel soon and that he goes back to his old style. Boku is sorely missed.

Book Review: Mesmerising
Summary: 5 Stars

I've read almost all of Murakami's books and I think this is one of his best. Also a great book to start with if you haven't read any of his books. Highly recommended!

Book Review: Among Haruki Murakami's Best Novels in Recent Memory: A Sublime, Lyrical Ode to the Night
Summary: 5 Stars

Ten years have passed since I encountered for the very first time, the enigmatic, but fascinating, psychological and cultural landscapes conjured by Haruki Murakami in such spellbinding works as "Dance Dance Dance", "A Wild Sheep Chase", and "Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World". At first, I thought he was a Japanese version of J. G. Ballard and Angela Carter, drawing upon both contemporary realities and classic fairy tales to render vivid, surreal versions of the present, in a literary style that I thought was so reminiscent of modern science fiction and fantasy. But soon I realized that he was such an astute, and elegant, observer of the real world too, in novels like "Norwegian Wood", "Sputnik Sweetheart", and especially, "The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle" (The latter a most treasured part of my personal library, blessed with his autographed signature in both English and Japanese, that I still feel quite lucky to have acquired while meeting him in person at a New York City literary festival book signing a few years ago.). Here, in "After Dark", Murakami has written among his best novels in recent memory (Quite possibly among the very best published this year too.), emphasizing a realistic, quasi-documentary film exploration of the hours between midnight and dawn, set in a recognizable, if slightly surreal, Tokyo landscape of American diners ("Denny's") and prostitution dens ("love hotels").

This tersely-worded novel on nocturnal encounters features the intertwining tales of two sisters; Eri, a fashion model who appears occasionally as an ever-present sleeper - and whose appearances seem most pregnant with meaning - and Mari, a young college student, who is drawn inexplicably into a series of chance encounters with a brutally beaten Chinese prostitute and a Japanese jazz trombonist. These chance encounters move inexorably from mere happenstance to elaborate excursions into empathy, compassion, and love. Mari becomes not simply a casual voyeur into this nocturnal realm, but rather, an active participant, whose very presence determines the "fates" of those she has met. Throughout, Murakami's keen sense of mordant humor and crisp, snappy dialogue remains quite acute, demonstrating that he is still a literary master in depicting the human condition. A literary master who has rendered such a captivating, almost universal, tale that is so rich in scope, even if it is so terse in its length; one which ought to be well-received by his legion of fans across the globe.

Book Review: Among Haruki Murakami's Best Novels in Recent Memory: A Sublime, Lyrical Ode to the Night
Summary: 5 Stars

Ten years have passed since I encountered for the very first time, the enigmatic, but fascinating, psychological and cultural landscapes conjured by Haruki Murakami in such spellbinding works as "Dance Dance Dance", "A Wild Sheep Chase", and "Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World". At first, I thought he was a Japanese version of J. G. Ballard and Angela Carter, drawing upon both contemporary realities and classic fairy tales to render vivid, surreal versions of the present, in a literary style that I thought was so reminiscent of modern science fiction and fantasy. But soon I realized that he was such an astute, and elegant, observer of the real world too, in novels like "Norwegian Wood", "Sputnik Sweetheart", and especially, "The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle" (The latter a most treasured part of my personal library, blessed with his autographed signature in both English and Japanese, that I still feel quite lucky to have acquired while meeting him in person at a New York City literary festival book signing a few years ago.). Here, in "After Dark", Murakami has written among his best novels in recent memory (Quite possibly among the very best published this year too.), emphasizing a realistic, quasi-documentary film exploration of the hours between midnight and dawn, set in a recognizable, if slightly surreal, Tokyo landscape of American diners ("Denny's") and prostitution dens ("love hotels").

This tersely-worded novel on nocturnal encounters features the intertwining tales of two sisters; Eri, a fashion model who appears occasionally as an ever-present sleeper - and whose appearances seem most pregnant with meaning - and Mari, a young college student, who is drawn inexplicably into a series of chance encounters with a brutally beaten Chinese prostitute and a Japanese jazz trombonist. These chance encounters move inexorably from mere happenstance to elaborate excursions into empathy, compassion, and love. Mari becomes not simply a casual voyeur into this nocturnal realm, but rather, an active participant, whose very presence determines the "fates" of those she has met. Throughout, Murakami's keen sense of mordant humor and crisp, snappy dialogue remains quite acute, demonstrating that he is still a literary master in depicting the human condition. A literary master who has rendered such a captivating, almost universal, tale that is so rich in scope, even if it is so terse in its length; one which ought to be well-received by his legion of fans across the globe.
More After Dark (Vintage International) reviews:
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