Tag Archive: Haruki Murakami


BURNING directed by Lee Chang-dong (South Korea. 2019)

burningThis quietly subversive and absorbing movie is based on the short story, Barn Burning, by Nobel laureate in waiting Haruki Murakami.

I haven’t read this but from a synopsis on Wikipedia it seems that the tale has been used as a stub from which the director has let his imagination flow freely. Lee Chang-dong appears to have added more than a few ideas and themes from The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle such as a missing woman, a mysterious garden well and an elusive cat. Continue reading

mboy258There are no books or websites (at least none that I’ve found) written for vegan men who decide to run their first marathon at the age of 59.

By way of contrast there are plenty of guide books and blogs with photos of healthy young athletes; a fact that tends to have a de-motivating effect on mature runners like yours truly.

This post therefore has the twofold aim of plugging a gap in the market and sharing my experience after finishing the gruelling 42.195 km (26.219 mile) course.

I am living proof that you can go the distance on a plant-based diet and at my age.

I am not one of life’s natural runners. At high school I made a conscious attempt to avoid the cross-country races that were part of physical education curriculum.

I only really started seriously jogging late in my 40s when the effect of the ‘dolce vita’ in Italy was starting to be evident through a rapidly expanding waistline. Continue reading

WHAT I TALK ABOUT WHEN I TALK ABOUT RUNNING by Haruki Murakami (Vintage Books, 2009)

3031024When I first read this memoir about five years ago I was a casual jogger.

Picking it up again as I train for my first marathon, I see it now as a valuable mini-manual to get into the right physical and mental state.

You don’t have to be an amateur athlete or an aspiring writer to appreciate Murakami’s down to earth words of wisdom but it helps.

As a celebrated novelist, frequently tipped for the Nobel Prize for Literature, and a prolific marathon finisher, the Japanese writer and runner shares his experiences in a style that goes beyond the standard textbooks on both pursuits. Continue reading

murakamiToday, I chanced upon a second-hand copy of  Haruki Murakami’s short story collection ‘Blind Willow Sleeping Woman’ and I like these words from the author’s introduction: 

“To put it in the simplest possible terms, I find writing novels a challenge, writing short stories a joy. If writing novels is like planting a forest, then writing short stories is more like planting a garden. The two processes complement each other, creating a complete landscape that I treasure. The green foliage of the trees casts a pleasant shade over the earth, and the wind rustles the leaves, which are sometimes dyed a brilliant gold. Meanwhile, in the garden, buds appear on the flowers, and colorful petals attract bees and butterflies, reminding us of the subtle transition from one season to the next.”

John Lennon claimed to have no idea why he called his song Norwegian Wood, but it is not hard to see why Haruki Murakami chose it as the title of his novel (now also a movie).
The ambiguities of the sexual encounter represented in the song illustrate how intimate relationships can often end up as power games where it is not always clear who is in charge.
 “I once had a girl, or should I say, she once had me”  sings Lennon, immediately subverting the convention of the male as the one in control;  significantly, in the end it is the woman who leaves him, not vice versa (“When I awoke, I was alone, this bird had flown”).
Murakami’s characters can mostly be defined by their sexual identity.  At the heart of the novel is the tragedy of a woman, Naoko,  who cannot come to terms with herself as a sexual being. In marked contrast, Nagasawa is a voracious womanizer who picks up girls for one-night stands.
The central character, Toru Watanabe, lies somewhere in between these two characters. He rejects shallow sexual encounters and learns to value trust and openness in his romantic relationships with Naoko, and later, Midori.  “I try to lie as little as possible” he says.
Putting such complex ideas on-screen is a challenging and ultimately impossible task. However,French director  Tran Anh Hung makes a brave attempt and thankfully focuses on the emotional depth of the story. On the official movie  website , he says “I wanted to recreate the raw painfulness of fresh wounds” .
Not  having been to Japan, I found that the movie gave me clear visual framework for the novel. It is helped by the fact that the cinematography of Mark Lee Ping Bin is exceptional. Equally stunning is Jonny Greenwood’s soundtrack which emphasises the underlying melancholy of the story.  The addition of songs by Can is also an inspired move .
Tran Anh Hunghas remains faithful to Murakami’s story although condensing it into a two-hour movie means that some changes are inevitable. There’s no place for “Storm Trooper”Toru’s obsessive dormitory roommate , or  the vivid background story of Reiko Ishida , an inmate of the mountain asylum to which Naoko retreats.
These scenes would distract from the main story  but  cuts of this kind weaken the narrative and illustrate why rich and complex literary novels rarely make for great cinema. Sound and vision are no match for a voice as distinctive as Murakami’s but this movie is about as close as you will get.