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Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman (Vintage International) - Community Reviews back

by Haruki Murakami, Jay Rubin, Philip Gabriel
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Joelle's Bibliofile
Joelle's Bibliofile rated it 5 years ago
Readers may be curious about Haruki Murakami due to the rave reviews of his full-length novels (ex: The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, 1Q84, Kafka on the Shore), and their popularity in translation throughout the world. Those who may have resisted the call to undertake his lengthy and fantastic works might...
Illuminati
Illuminati rated it 11 years ago
1 star stories: New York Mining Disaster, Airplane, A Perfect Day for Kangaroos, Dabchick. 2 star stories: Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman, Hunting Knife, A Poor Aunt’s Story, Nausea 1979, The Year of Spaghetti, The Rise and Fall of Sharpie Cakes, The Ice Man, Crabs, Where I’m Likely To Find It. 3 sta...
nouveau
nouveau rated it 11 years ago
Tokyo, Sunday 3 November 2013, 1944 local timeI'll borrow a page from the Penketron playbook, and put out a longish entry on a short and sweet book. but wait, BLIND WILLOW, SLEEPING WOMAN isn't actually a short book. it's twenty four short stories by that master of hyper-contemporary Japanese litera...
otakumom
otakumom rated it 11 years ago
I generally don't like short stories because I find them too short. This anthology of Murakami's short stories has a mix of his mundane story telling to the fantastic magical realism style. I enjoyed some of the stories. A lot of the stories felt too short or had interesting premises but felt und...
Feed Your Soul
Feed Your Soul rated it 12 years ago
Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman was the first book by Haruki Murakami that I have ever read and I was not disappointed. I had been meaning to read his work for quite some time, but IQ84 seemed like too big a book to take on without being accustomed to Murakami's style. The book itself is a collection o...
Dreamworld
Dreamworld rated it 12 years ago
There's a few weird stories here and there. Review later.
Mirkat Always Reading
Mirkat Always Reading rated it 12 years ago
The other day, my son asked me, "What is your least favorite letter of the alphabet?" (He's nine, by the way.) I replied that I like all of the letters because they allow me to make all the sounds I need to make. I also said that I would be afraid to insult any of the letters by identifying a least ...
bookwookiee
bookwookiee rated it 12 years ago
If you've read Murakami before, you know what you're getting into with these stories. Many of the same motifs - dark bars, bizarre childhoods, nostalgia, swimming, jazz, noir, femme fatale, mysterious appearances/disappearances, ears, pasta. Many of the themes are consistent as well - loneliness, ab...
altheaann
altheaann rated it 12 years ago
Wonderful, surreal, dreamlike... Murakami excels at the art of the short story; and I'd definitely recommend this book as a good introduction to his work.Contents:Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman - One of the more surrealist works here. A young man has to take his younger cousin to a doctor's appointmen...
Book On The Move
Book On The Move rated it 12 years ago
I only read the first story, and I actually liked it... but... dafuq...
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