You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion

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Kafka on the Shore
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Kafka on the Shore
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Travis
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Jun 29, 2017 08:48AM

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That reminds me, I want to go back to Pragya's review. I was reading it on my phone and I wanted to comment. Hate the app.

We should be reading this for the group themed read in July. I guess we still could since there's no start date requirement. This definitely fits the weird theme.



ch 28(view spoiler)
ch29(view spoiler)
ch30. I haven't quite finished this chapter. (view spoiler)
Agh! I'm off to Bournemouth later today for the last weekend of my course. I'll read on the train journey there and back but won't be able to comment until Monday when I return.

I believe a few years removed from the foreskin is talking about how at puberty it's loose enough to slide down away from the penis head. I found this article. Circumcision in Japan is gaining popularity but still extremely low and mostly a Tokyo thing for highly sexually active males.
I got brave and googled but not after much thought into what may be a safe search lol


Sorry, I got caught up on hols, then caught up with being off work, and now I'm sick. I wanted to read today while off work but my brain was too fuzzy.
I want to make a serious dent in this over the weekend though. I'm enjoying it immensely.


(view spoiler)

He said he has one.
Circumcisions are very rare in Aus as well. So I don't find it as odd as you do. If everyone washes their bits, you are okay with UTIs and infections, so it's not needed to chop bits of you off. I don't think I have ever seen a circumcised "member".
My sister in law is Jewish, and everyone was concerned that my nephew would be circumcised. No one cared they weren't married, or that it was a quick pregnancy into their relationship. The main concern people had was whether he was going to get snipped. He didn't, so even people with religious reasons don't do it some times here.

Re: Speech impediment - (view spoiler)
Re: embarrassment - LOL! They're probably wondering which book you were reading so they could get it and read it themselves.
I enjoyed your comments Rusalka. Hopefully your head clears soon and you feel better.

Thanks so much, Janice for telling me about this thread. I missed it. Your impression about this book is exactly how I felt when I read it. Hoping that as the story moves on, some answers will start coming but umm..
Travis, wow you're going for a second read. Brave of you! I have to do that sometime, just not right now. This was my first Murakami and I totally swore off him after this but thankfully Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage redeemed him to an extent and his latest short story collection Men Without Women went a long way in acquainting us further. I still have Norwegian Wood and 1Q84 to go through then I might circle back to this.
Sarah, you are drawing a lot of comparisons with Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World. Was it an easier book to read compared to this one? Would you recommend it?
Franz Kafka surely has an imprint on Murakami. His latest story collection includes his take on The Metamorphosis which is quite interesting. You can read that story for free here - http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/201...
By the way, after you finish reading this book and have taken a lot of time to analyze and ponder, you might want to read this story from his latest collection which I really liked - http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/201.... I had a difficult time getting through this book and picking up another Murakami after. This story will redeem him for you.
I will keep dropping by. I don't remember the book vividly now as I read it some 3-4 years back but all your observations are interesting. I read this with two of my friends who alternated reading the book and then we threw around hypothesis and tried to understand what was really happening. I think what stumped me the most was towards the end of the book (view spoiler) .

Thanks so much, Janice for telling me about this thread. I missed it. Your impression about this book is exactly how I felt when I read it. Ho..."
Lovely to see you! Personally, from what I have read, I think his easiest read is Norwegian Wood as it's very real world based, with not much of the parallel universes and fantasy elements. It's very linear. But has his gorgeous prose. I loved Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World and The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle but for different reasons. Hard-Boiled is more fantasy. Wind-Up Bird is probably a stepping stone between Norwegian, and Hard-Boiled. I'll let you know where I think this one fits as I get further along.
The thing I have learnt about Murakami is you have to relax, and let the storytelling sweep you along. You will not understand everything. And that is okay. It's the writing, the storytelling, and the experience you are coming for. That took me a while to get.
Lexx just read Hard-Boiled, and didn't like it as much as Sarah and I did. I think that was Mr hyper-rational getting in the way. He finds it hard to relax into a book, he wants to analyse everything, and you can't do that with Murakami I think.

I felt very guilty today with the same bug sleeping until 12pm, and then reading the internet and watching tv with my aching body, sore throat and fevery/fuzzy head by myself in peace until Lexx came home from work.
I will survive and have told Lexx I'm reading tomorrow.

Re: Speech impediment"
Ah I see. Good observation. I wonder if there is a correlation, or if they chose other words. See. Fuzzy head. I missed what you guys were meaning. I'll ask Lexx with his limited Japanese in the morning.



We also had a buddy read to hard boiled Pragya if you do read it check it out.

So I saw this earlier and didn't know if it would be of interest but it's percentage of circumcized men in various countries

Re: Speech impediment"
Ah I see. Good observation. I wonder if there is a correlation, or if they chose other words. See. Fuzzy head. I missed what you guys were meaning. I'll ask L..."
I'll be interesting in what Lexx has to say about it.

For me, it wasn't about making a decision for another person. I couldn't bear the thought of putting my son through the pain. When we were being counselled about it in prenatal classes, there was heavy emphasis on not getting it done because there was no anesthetic and the baby feels pain just like everyone else. At the time, I didn't consider that someone may have been pushing us one way or another. I was a new mother faced with the knowledge that her babe was going to be in pain. It all seemed cruel and inhumane.

So he pleads that he has been misrepresented and only has a couple of years of high school Japanese. I pointed it out it's more than all of us.
He had a couple of thoughts.
One - are the words some of those that have been appropriated from English into Japanese? So it's a direct "translation" of the play in the English words.
Two - he doesn't think ministry in Japanese includes the character for tree (it doesn't, I google translated).
Three - it could just be the principle of Murakami's word play for that character, and it's been applied in a way that makes sense in English. So clever translation.
Extension of that thought, is that how it was written in Japanese doesn't translate, and this was the work around they came up with in English.
Other thoughts we just had then, is that it could be a play across the different Japanese scripts as well. There are three scripts for Japanese, maybe there is a joke if you write the words in Katakana or Kanji instead of Hiragana for example.
So... we have no clue lol.


Hmmm... I find this one to be more dream-quality, like I'm caught up in a dream. I don't know that I can say that about The Dark Tower. Maybe I'll feel differently when I finish it - which seems to be taking forever!

Exactly what I thought. So... a guy you just met (view spoiler)
On the way there, I had to laugh (view spoiler)
I think I need to go and find some of these books he mentions too. Or at least look at them on Goodreads.

Chapter 28 - (view spoiler)
Chapter 29 - (view spoiler)
Chapter 30 - (view spoiler)



Now Sarah whose face is the cat making on your cover do you think




Now Sarah whose face is the cat making on your cover do you think"
Good question. At first, I only saw the cat. A bit like an optical illusion. I'm guessing it's Kafka.


I finished the book yesterday. It seemed to drag on and I knew if I kept crawling into bed with it and falling asleep, I'd never get it finished. So I parked on the couch and binge read it till I was done.
You might not want to read this until you're done - (view spoiler)
I realized that I could use this book for my Survey challenge for task 12 - pets. Since my answer was cats and cats were featured in the book, it was a perfect fit. I talk to my cat and she chooses to acknowledge, or ignore, depending on her mood.["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>
Books mentioned in this topic
Men Without Women (other topics)Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage (other topics)
Norwegian Wood (other topics)
Kafka on the Shore (other topics)
Kafka on the Shore (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Haruki Murakami (other topics)Haruki Murakami (other topics)