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The Guardian

"???????? ??? ???? ??????? ???? ???? ?? ?? ????? ??? ?????? ???? ?????? ???? ?? ??? ????? ??? ??????? ??? ???? ??? ?????".

New York Times Book Review

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2015

1,757 people are currently reading
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About the author

Haruki Murakami

596?books128k?followers
Haruki Murakami (´åÉÏ´ºÊ÷) is a Japanese writer. His novels, essays, and short stories have been best-sellers in Japan and internationally, with his work translated into 50 languages and having sold millions of copies outside Japan. He has received numerous awards for his work, including the Gunzo Prize for New Writers, the World Fantasy Award, the Tanizaki Prize, Yomiuri Prize for Literature, the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award, the Noma Literary Prize, the Franz Kafka Prize, the Kiriyama Prize for Fiction, the Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Choice Awards for Best Fiction, the Jerusalem Prize, and the Princess of Asturias Awards.
Growing up in Ashiya, near Kobe before moving to Tokyo to attend Waseda University, he published his first novel Hear the Wind Sing (1979) after working as the owner of a small jazz bar for seven years. His notable works include the novels Norwegian Wood (1987), The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle (1994¨C95), Kafka on the Shore (2002) and 1Q84 (2009¨C10); the last was ranked as the best work of Japan's Heisei era (1989¨C2019) by the national newspaper Asahi Shimbun's survey of literary experts. His work spans genres including science fiction, fantasy, and crime fiction, and has become known for his use of magical realist elements. His official website cites Raymond Chandler, Kurt Vonnegut and Richard Brautigan as key inspirations to his work, while Murakami himself has named Kazuo Ishiguro, Cormac McCarthy and Dag Solstad as his favourite currently active writers. Murakami has also published five short story collections, including First Person Singular (2020), and non-fiction works including Underground (1997), an oral history of the Tokyo subway sarin attack, and What I Talk About When I Talk About Running (2007), a memoir about his experience as a long distance runner.
His fiction has polarized literary critics and the reading public. He has sometimes been criticised by Japan's literary establishment as un-Japanese, leading to Murakami's recalling that he was a "black sheep in the Japanese literary world". Meanwhile, Murakami has been described by Gary Fisketjon, the editor of Murakami's collection The Elephant Vanishes (1993), as a "truly extraordinary writer", while Steven Poole of The Guardian praised Murakami as "among the world's greatest living novelists" for his oeuvre.

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Profile Image for s.penkevich.
1,496 reviews12.7k followers
December 31, 2024
Whenever I read a Murakami novel, the world around me always feels a little more magical. Such is his aim, as he explains in Novelist As a Vocation, a collection of brief essays reflecting on his role as an author. ¡®The world seems dull, but in fact it¡¯²õ filled with magical and mysterious rough gemstones,¡¯ says Murakami, ¡®the novelist is equipped with the eyes to discover them.¡¯ And these gemstones shine under the polishing of his prose in both fiction and nonfiction and in these essays he examines the act of writing in a way that registers similarly to the fantastic worlds he creates: a reality-adjacent realm where anything is possible. Looking over the course of his career. Murakami muses on the ¡®trial and error¡¯ that led him to craft a remarkable and unique voice, stating ¡®if there is indeed something original about my novels, I think it springs from the principle of freedom,¡¯ and this same sense of freedom is instilled into the reader as his rather surrealistic and thoughtful stories untether our minds from the mundane to explore life from new heights. ¡®I want to open a window in their souls and let the fresh air in,¡¯ he says of the reader and across these essays we are treated to a first-hand account of his pursuit for such an effect as well, from his inspirations to the ways the world around him¡ªboth the global literary platform in which he publishes as well as contemporary Japanese society¡ªshapes him as a writer. While those looking to Novelist As a Vocation for thematic explorations of his works or a how-to guide to writing may find themselves wanting, Murakami¡¯²õ discourse on the act of writing and his pursuit for originality are plenty to satisfy and inspire the curious mind.

¡®What is originality, after all, but the shape that results from the natural impulse to communicate to others that feeling of freedom, that unconstrained joy.¡¯

Reading like Novelist As a Vocation is like a nice cozy chat with a favorite author with Murakami adopting a rather conversationalist tone to his essays while eschewing any academic or instructional airs that often accompany books on writing. It¡¯²õ old man Murakami lovingly dispensing his thoughts (and, admittedly, sometimes its a bit eye rolling ¡°old man¡± hot takes on society or bemoaning the education system not being like it was in his day) and it makes for a lovely read full of big ideas on what being an artist means to him. And, more specifically, how he feels about his own pursuits of artistry and success while offering a few pieces of advice along the way. ¡®Novels well up naturally from within you, not something you can casually, strategically change,¡¯ he posits, arguing that if writing to market research or the whims of others is the center that ¡®a work born from such a shallow base won¡¯t find many readers.¡¯ He seeks creativity and agrees with Polish poet who said ¡®To reach the source, you have to swim against the current. Only trash swims downstream.¡¯ For Murakami, the act of writing is something that should move on its own, not with the current, and he finds he was able to capture this because the act of writing is one he undertook for himself. He says finds a sort of ¡®theraputic¡¯ aspect in it that unlocked the magic in the world around him and, by mining the magic with words as his shovel, was able to bestow the magic into the hearts of his readers as well.
¡®All creative activity is, to some extent, done partly with the intention to rectify or fix yourself. In other words, by relativizing yourself, by adapting your soul to a form that¡¯²õ different from what it is now, you can resolve ¨C or sublimate ¨C the contradictions, rifts, and distortions that inevitably crop up in the process of being alive. And if things go well, this effect can be shared with readers.¡¯

For him, it is a sort of free expression he finds akin to the jazz music he enjoys and often incorporates into his works. In an old essay predating this book (a decent amount of this book will be repeated information from a new perspective for those who have long scoured the internet to read his interviews and essays), he describes his method of writing is best when free from restraints on planning:
¡®I never plan. I never know what the next page is going to be. Many people don't believe me. But that's the fun of writing a novel or a story, because I don't know what's going to happen next. I'm searching for melody after melody.¡¯

Of course, he adds, these are just his ¡®theories¡¯ that work for him, much as other writers had their own (he contrasts the writing styles of ¡ªa clear inspiration to his works¡ªwith that of and aligns his own methods with the latter) and if you find one that works best for you, hone in on it. In this way, this is less an instructive book than one about big ideas but the lack of instruction is part of the message: be true to your art and it will thrive and being true means seeking originality and creativity.

¡®These words may provide the best definition of originality available. ¡°Fresh, energetic, and unmistakably your own.¡¯

Readers of Murakami will no doubt find that he has a distinct and unique voice in the global literary word. His works often harness Western culture from The Beatles to the structures of authors like and (both of whom he has translated) all poured into a concoction of dreamlike vibes and surreal musings that transcend the need to identify what is ¡°reality¡± and what is ¡°not.¡± It is an original voice that he is proud of and seeks to consider how one can look for originality:
¡®In my opinion, an artist must fulfill the following three basic requirements to be deemed ¡°original¡±:
1. The artist must possess a clearly unique and individual style (of sound, language, or color). Moreover, that uniqueness should be immediately perceivable on first sight (or hearing).
2. That style must have the power to update itself. It should grow with time, never resting in the same place for long, since it expresses an internal and spontaneous process of self-reinvention.
3. Over time, that characteristic style should become integrated within the psyche of its audience, to become a part of their basic standard of evaluation. Subsequent generations of artists should see that style as a rich resource from which they can draw.
¡­need not fulfill all three requirements equally, of course
¡¯

I enjoyed learning about Hungarian author who, after leaving Hungary for Switzerland in 1956 amidst political upheaval, began writing in French out of necessity. Murakami considers that ¡®through writing in a foreign language thats she succeeded in developing a style that was new and uniquely hers,¡¯ and while the two are quite different in style, he feels a kinship with her having written his first novel, , in his second language, English and then translated it back into Japanese. In doing so he found he could streamline his prose but also find a voice that was unique to him. While he often is told his ¡®work has the feel of translation,¡¯ he finds that to be part of his pride in his prose and what lends it to global translation and accessibility. He has always been big on sharing his ideas for that reason he likes to use 'easy words and good metaphors; good allegory,' and believes you should be 'kind to the reader' when explaining the plot so he explains 'carefully and clearly.'

'I think the first task for the aspiring novelists is to read tons of novels.'

While it isn't the primary focus, I should not that this book isnt devoid of writing advice either. Murakami suggests ideas like the best way to write characters is to observe people and listen to how they talk. Also to read a lot, both good and bad books and see what sticks. He also believes in trying new things. 'There aren¡¯t any new words. Our job is to give new meanings and special overtones to absolutely ordinary words,' and by doing so we find our own magic. Still, I find his commitment to sharing with the reader to be the most endearing. In his , Murakami said:
'Dreaming is the day job of novelists, but sharing our dreams is a still more important task for us. We cannot be novelists without this sense of sharing something.'

I find this beautiful. And that is why he also believes your writing should be committed to justice, for what good is sharing a vision if it isn't a vision that upholds each other. once wrote that 'words are events, they do things, change things,' and in Murakami we see an aim of words to move us, make us think differently--particularly think out of the box--and hopefully, make us appreciate life and each other.

¡®Perhaps no other writer concerned with memory and the difficulty of reclaiming the past ¨C not Kawabata, not even Proust ¨C has succeeded as well as Murakami in capturing the immediacy of the experience of d¨¦j¨¤ vu.¡¯
-,

One cannot share with the world without a good translator, of which Murakami has had many. There are a few notes scattered in the book about his various translators, , , and , though the translation of this book is credited to the ¡®Harukimurakami Archival Labyrinth¡¯ which feels like something straight out of the mysterious libraries in his works. As always, there is magic inside his works if you just know where to look.

¡®When the writing process is still underway, however, I have to be able to incorporate criticisms and suggestions in as humble and open-minded a way as possible.¡¯

There are plenty of other musings in here, from responding to his early critics (with a touch of well-earned gloating) to his thoughts on being an author and not worrying too much about critics or awards. ¡®A literary prize can turn the spotlight on a particular work, but it can¡¯t breathe life into it,¡¯ he states, later adding that prizes ¡®mean vastly different things to different people,¡¯ and ¡®you can¡¯t make sweeping statements about them, one way or another¡¯ and advises artists to avoid that. There is an acknowledgement that prizes can keep you in print and get attention, but that writing to a prize shouldn¡¯t be the intent. As always, its about being true to the art, to yourself, and if so, you will be true to the reader.

¡®The novel I produce may be praised by people (if it turns out well), but no one seems to appreciate the process itself that led to it. That¡¯²õ a burden a writer must carry alone.¡¯

I enjoyed Novelist As a Vocation for its lovely first-hand insights into the mind of Murakami. It is more broad sweeping in ideas than necessarily craft based and is perhaps a book best suited to Murakami enthusiasts but one need not be in order to enjoy it. For those e looking for more insight into the craft of his novels might want to also consider checking out ¡¯²õ Who We're Reading When We're Reading Murakami or by one of Murakami¡¯²õ English translators, , though the big picture musings on the vocation of novelist is quite endearing and insightful here.

3.5/5

¡®Writing fiction is an entirely personal process that takes place in a closed room. Shut away in a study, you sit at a desk and (in most cases) create an imaginary story out of nothing and put it in the form of writing. The formless and subjective is transformed into something tangible and objective (or at least something that seeks to be objective). Defined simply, this is the day-to-day work we novelists perform.¡¯
Profile Image for Valeriu Gherghel.
Author?6 books1,945 followers
January 8, 2023
Nu s?nt un fan al romanelor lui Haruki Murakami. Admir, ?n schimb, atitudinea lui profesionist? fa?? de meseria scrisului. To?i japonezii sufer? de ?workaholism¡±, Haruki nu face excep?ie. Lucreaz? cel pu?in 5-6 ore pe zi ?i nu se opre?te p?n? nu acoper? 10 pagini (fie c? se simte inspirat, fie c? nu). Oricum, nu crede ?n Muze...

Prozatorul japonez nu este un po(i)etician savant ?i recunoa?te cu smerit? ironie acest adev?r: ?Puterea min?ii mele e limitat?. Nu prea reu?esc s? leg teorii logice sau idei abstracte¡°.

Nu vom g?si, a?adar, ?n cartea lui Murakami observa?ii de naratologie, ca ?n lucr?rile lui Umberto Eco (?ase plimb?ri prin p?durea narativ? e o capodoper?), Italo Calvino sau Mario Vargas Llosa. Dac? dorim am?nunte cu privire la pozi?ia ?vocii narative¡± ?ntr-o povestire, nu la prozatorul japonez trebuie s? le c?ut?m.

?n schimb, dac? vrem s? ghicim o parte din secretul faimei sale, n-ar fi r?u s? ?inem minte o observa?ie de bun sim?. Murakami subliniaz? adesea - ?i pe bun? dreptate - c? prozatorul trebuie s? aib? o bun? condi?ie fizic? (?i mental?). Proza presupune lungi ?ederi la masa de scris, asumarea unor constr?ngeri de ordin fizic, o rezisten?? de mucenic, un program de ascet. De obicei, prozatorii nu s?nt noctambuli (excep?ia e Dostoievski) ?i nu frecventeaz? cafenelele, nu-?i sting of-ul ?n absint. Las? aceste volupt??i poe?ilor.

Cu excep?ia lui Flaubert (un sedentar incorigibil), to?i prozatorii semnificativi au f?cut mult? mi?care. Tolstoi se plimba ore ?ntregi prin p?durea de la Iasnaia Poliana, c?l?rea, juca tenis ?i, la 67 de ani, se urca pe biciclet? pentru a-?i ?nt?ri musculatura gambelor ?i a-?i amuza nepo?ii. C?t despre Haruki Murakami, toat? lumea ?tie - dintr-o carte anterioar?, Autoportretul scriitorului ca alerg?tor de curs? lung? - c? a participat la numeroase curse de maraton. Prozatorul trebuie s?-?i cultive rezisten?a fizic?, prin gimastic?, haltere, sumo, box, scufund?ri, ?not. Un prozator care nu ?tie s? ?noate e nul...

?nchei nota de fa?? cu acest pasaj instructiv:
?Mi s-a ?nt?mplat, c?nd am lucrat la romane de mari dimensiuni, s? m? ?nchid ?n biroul meu ?i s? stau singur, aplecat peste masa de scris, mai mult de un an (ba chiar doi, dac? nu trei). M? trezeam diminea?a devreme ?i timp de cinci sau ?ase ore m? concentram ?i scriam. C?nd e?ti at?t de cufundat ?n lucru, creierul se supra?nc?lze?te (?ncepe s?-?i frig? fruntea, la propriu) ?i, la un moment dat, ?i se ?nce?o?eaz? mintea. De aceea eu dup?-amiaza dorm, ascult muzic? sau citesc c?r?i inofensive. O asemenea via?? este foarte sedentar? ?i atunci ies zilnic s? fac mi?care, cam o or?. Pe urm? ?mi preg?tesc lucrul pe a doua zi. Repet mereu acelea?i activit??i, ca un obicei neschimbat¡± (pp.150-151).

?mi place nespus modestia lui Haruki Murakami.

P. S. Prozatorul d? rar interviuri, ?ine ?i mai rar conferin?e, nu particip? cu pl?cere la discu?ii ?i lans?ri.
Profile Image for Liong.
261 reviews465 followers
November 24, 2022
I like his advice,

"I think the first task for the aspiring novelists is to read tons of novels.".

This book is written about himself how he become a novelist and some of his opinions on Japanese education and culture.

If you are a Haruki Murakami fan, then this is a must-read book. :-)

You will know more about Murakami's life, especially how and where he wrote his books.

You can learn a lot from this book to become a good writer like Haruki Murakami.
Profile Image for Paromjit.
3,080 reviews25.9k followers
December 14, 2022
This is a collation of essays by Haruki Murakami, put together it forms a blend of memoir, reflections on his life and advice for would be writers. As someone who read the author's novels and loved them in a much earlier period of my life, I have not read much of his more recent works, I was really looking forward to reading this in what in my view is a fascinating writer. This proved to be a mixed reading experience, I am not sure many aspiring authors would find his approach, of what can be primarily summed up as just get on with it, that useful. However, I was interested in him, such as his love of jazz, his belief on the importance of physical health and his running, his writing process, his sources of inspiration, and how a book comes alive for him and together for him, including his focus on characters. We follow his path to success, the critical reviews, and how he came to make it in America, and he offers his personal thoughts on disaparate range of subjects, but for me the highlights were the parts that focused on him, both personal and as a writer. I think these essays will appeal to fans of the author. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.
Profile Image for Milly Cohen.
1,328 reviews455 followers
April 18, 2017
Haruki te quiero. Aunque me gusta m¨¢s leer tus novelas tambi¨¦n adoro saber sobre ti. Me das ternura. Te creo. No te disculpes tanto. T¨² sigue escribiendo. Te agradezco infinitas horas de placer. Muchas veces quieres contar algo en tu libro pero te detienes diciendo que eso tomar¨ªa mucho espacio. Ojal¨¢ te hubieras tomado ese espacio porque yo quiero saber todo sobre ti. Espero que m¨¢s adelante haya una continuaci¨®n. Gracias por desnudarte, aunque sea un poco, frente a nosotros.
Profile Image for Ken.
Author?3 books1,153 followers
Read
September 18, 2023
You could interpret the title of Haruki Murakami¡¯²õ Novelist as a Vocation two ways: a.) as a vocation for you, the reader, or b.) as a vocation for me, Murakami, the writer. Reading the book itself, however, will prove that the latter proves more true than the former.

Which is not to say that there are no tips. If you¡¯ve thought about writing a novel, even in a desultory, pipe-dream kind of way, you¡¯ll find all the encouragement you need here. Murakami is of the school that most anyone who can put together sentences can write a novel. It may not be very good, but it will be a novel.

He also sides with the no-way-Jos¨¦ to outlining crowd. Just write and follow where your prose leads you. He repeats what I¡¯ve read many, many places before: Characters have a will of their own and will take over like mutineers on the H.M.S. Bounty. For beginners, that has got to be a relief. Sharing the job duties with your characters lightens the load, after all.

Specialized training? No need. MFA? BS (¡°Be serious.¡±) It¡¯²õ all a rather freewheeling, Nike-like ¡°Just do it¡± kind of affair here.

I can disparage this attitude easily because, well, it¡¯²õ hole-ier than Swiss cheese that goes to church every Sunday. But then I recall a dear poetry friend (now passed, sadly) who encouraged my early poetry writing all the way to publication. Without the ¡°Just do it and don¡¯t worry about the Ivory Tower types guarding the gates¡± encouragement she offered, I wouldn't have come as far as I have today. To me, that unabashed ¡°If you like doing it, write¡± attitude of hers was very much in the Murakami School of Wing-It-and-Have-Fun (even though the hours and loneliness might be brutal and take a toll on your physical health).

But really, this book, originally released seven years ago in Japan, is more memoir like in its approach. Only a few chapters dabble in ¡°How To¡± mechanics. For the most part, it¡¯²õ memoir-like, seeing writing through the lens of Murakami¡¯²õ past books.

When I consider that lens and the fact that this book is a past publication, I wonder how much its rerelease is designed to help sales of Murakami¡¯²õ oeuvre overall. Not a bad plan, really. Because no matter how laissez-faire or contradictory (at one point saying the act of daily writing can be painful after earlier calling it a joy) or opinionated (with lots of ¡°this is just my opinion" caveats) the book can be, it is interesting to read because Murakami himself is interesting.

And he¡¯²õ honest. He writes, ¡°I¡¯ve never had the sense that I¡¯m writing for someone else. And I don¡¯t particularly have that feeling even now.¡± Meaning: This book reads like a love song from Haruki to Haruki. That his legions of readers would love it just as well makes sense. Just know, if you go, that this book is not part of that large stable of books telling you how to write. It¡¯²õ one man¡¯²õ journey and, like any man¡¯²õ journey, that alone can encourage you to write. Or not.

Also, be prepared for some score-settling between a Japanese writer and his country's literary gate keepers. Murakami has had the last laugh already, so I guess this is a victory lap of sorts, a dragging of Hector's body around Troy's battle-scarred walls.

I hope this review helps. If it doesn¡¯t, that¡¯²õ not my problem. (See, I can be Murakami-like myself! This review, after all, was written for me. If you enjoy, I'm very pleased, of course, but if not, SHRUG.)
Profile Image for Meike.
Author?1 book4,396 followers
December 17, 2022
If you're looking for advice on how to become a writer, this book will not provide all too much help - but that's also its strength, because Murakami, in his trademark humble and calm way, mostly shares personal experiences and attitudes regarding his writing process. Riffing on broad topics like creativity, target audiences, and marketing, the author goes off on several tangents, which gives the text a highly conversational feel. And Murakami is clearly the antidote to the (in Germany still highly relevant) genius cult: For him, writing is about talent, yes, but even more about discipline and determination. He stresses the importance of structure, toughness, and diligence, which isn't exactly glamorous, but certainly very honest and true. In addition (and of course), the process of writing to him also means joy.

While this is not the most comprehensive, stringent book about writing novels (it also suffers from a certain repetitiveness in places), I enjoyed spending time with the highly sympathetic, fascinating author and had fun gathering tidbits that further illuminate his literary work (and they are in there - this book will prove useful for Murakami exegetes). To me, a currently particularly relevant argument was Murakami's insistence that not only are his novels for everyone to enjoy, he as a writer can also be anyone he wants in his texts, from the 20-year-old lesbian to the old man: It's the beauty of literature, and the power of empathy that can render stories successful, not the close connection between writer and character (which is not an argument against amplifying marginalized voices; rather, both standpoints are equally true and do not contradict each other).

Murakami also writes about his success abroad and how he went about it, so let me mention that there's a German edition of this book, , translated by the wonderful (who told me about her work with Murakami and other Japanese lit-related things ). I'd love to read a proper autobiography of Murakami at some point, although I doubt that he - a man who hardly gives any interviews - will write one. His life and work remain endlessly fascinating to me.

...oh, and thanks to this book, I can now confirm: Haruki highly appreciates the work of his evil twin !
Profile Image for Sam Quixote.
4,724 reviews13.3k followers
December 1, 2022
Novelist As a Vocation is a collection of 11 nonfiction essays by Haruki Murakami that are part memoir and part writing manual that was published in 2015 and has been translated and published into English for the first time this year. And I¡¯d like to say it¡¯²õ a cracking read - because I¡¯ve been a Murakami fan for years, I¡¯ve been looking forward to this one in particular for months and I read and loved Stephen King¡¯²õ On Writing when I first read it years ago, which this book is basically Murakami¡¯²õ version of - but unfortunately it¡¯²õ not. Novelist As a Vocation is as dry and uninspiring to read as it is titled.

Right away in the first essay - Are Novelists Broad-Minded? - I found myself disagreeing with the author. He says that anyone can write and that writing a novel requires no training - just pick up a pen or keyboard and off you go. Which, in a technical sense, is true, but misleading to anyone who¡¯²õ actually tried this and found that initial burst of enthusiasm peter out after a couple of days. Trying to wing it is an amateur mistake and I¡¯m surprised a writer as experienced as Murakami would put this out there for wannabes to pursue as it¡¯ll only lead to numerous dead-ends for who knows how long.

But then Murakami is only putting forward his own approach to writing, it turns out. And this aspect of the book is interesting, as any Murakami fan will find. Beginning with his first novel, Hear the Wind Sing, Murakami can apparently just start writing and a novel will fall together in the draft, with no planning or outline or anything. Then the penny drops: he does a TON of rewriting, which makes sense as there¡¯²õ bound to be a lot of holes and repetition and ideas tossed out in favour of better ones, when you¡¯re just throwing stuff onto the page without planning it.

It works for him - he compares it to jazz, the music he¡¯²õ been a lifelong fan of, which makes sense - but I do wonder if it really all did just happen for him as seemingly easy as it did. The first time he writes a novel and it just works, gets published and he wins a literary prize - he didn¡¯t write before, stories, etc. when he was younger? Come on. Or maybe he¡¯²õ telling the truth and he¡¯²õ simply special. Could be.

But that superficial glaze becomes an increasing annoyance throughout. It¡¯²õ only in a later essay that he concedes that there is a gestation period for ideas but that this is an ¡°invisible process¡±, so presumably then he¡¯²õ just thinking up the idea for the novel, short story, whatever, without taking notes, and then setting off. So there is actually more to the process, he just didn¡¯t bother to elaborate until later, for no reason. That¡¯²õ when he does elaborate because other times he writes incredibly frustrating things like:

¡°After a great deal of trial and error - I will save the details of this process for another occasion¡± on p.82 in So What Should I Write About? and ¡°I???ll delve into that topic more some other time¡± on p.180 in Who Do I Write For?

Are you kidding me - when would be a better time to go into details of your process than in a book about your process?!? How many more books like this are you likely to write - if not now, when?!

Or there¡¯²õ the repetition of points he made in earlier essays. In Regarding Schools, he talks about how nobody really needs a qualification to write, and instead advocates for reading a lot to start with to see how a novel is structured - both points he made before, in the same book.

It¡¯²õ stuff like this that makes me believe him when he says he just wings it because that¡¯²õ the effect reading some of these essays is like - a lot of half-baked ideas that he never got around to properly forming or else just goes around and around making a lot of elementary and unremarkable points.

Like in So What Should I Write About? when he suggests that wannabes read and write a lot and says that, in Who Do I Write For?, he writes for himself, but also readers too. Zzz¡­ Some essays like What Kind of Characters Should I Include? are stunningly banal where he talks about how discovering the third person changed the style of stories he told. This is a guy who¡¯²õ supposedly read a lot but it never occurred to him to switch from first person to third person - had he never come across this before in other books?!

He is prone to saying weird things though. Like in On Originality where he says on p.59 that The Beatles only achieved classic status after the general public had agreed they were good - but they were always considered good! They were huge when they were only in their 20s and only became more famous over time. He makes it sound like there was some question over whether their music was good or not when there never was - only time made them classic.

And then there¡¯²õ the odd chip on the shoulder he seems to harbour about Japanese critics. This crops up in numerous essays where he writes in On Literary Prizes how he doesn¡¯t care about not winning the Akutagawa Prize in the 1970s (that¡¯²õ why he¡¯²õ writing about it still, 50 years later), and frequently mentions unkind things critics say about his work. I always wondered why he moved around so much, writing his books in Italy and America, and it turns out he was escaping wrathful Japanese critics (though he seems to have made his peace with them now, or vice versa, as he has been living in Japan for some time now).

It¡¯²õ just surprising how much he¡¯²õ let bad reviews affect his life. Grow up dude. Nobody cares about critics - you think I have a fraction of this guy¡¯²õ net worth or audience? We¡¯ll bitch and moan but it never outlasts the work itself and he should have known that then. Oh, and his conclusion on literary prizes? They don¡¯t really matter but they also mean different things to different people. Great. That kind of bland summation is endemic in this book and turned me from being indifferent to becoming increasingly hostile to what turned out to be a stupefyingly vapid and conventional book from a writer who¡¯²õ (mostly) anything but.

He occasionally stumbles across a thoughtful musing, like on p.68 about expressing yourself freely:

¡®It¡¯²õ probably best not to start out by asking ¡°What am I seeking?¡± Rather it¡¯²õ better to ask ¡°Who would I be if I weren¡¯t seeking anything?¡± and then try to visualize that aspect of yourself.¡¯

And, if you¡¯re a fan of the author, the insight into his process may be compelling. He writes the equivalent of 1600 English words a day, every day, and initially wrote Hear the Wind Sing in English before translating it into Japanese - his limited English making for a more bare narrative approach that stopped him from overwriting, as he found he was doing in Japanese and perhaps led to its eventual success.

A lot of his memoir stuff though isn¡¯t that exciting. He was a bad student at school, took many years more than usual to graduate university, worked at a jazz cafe prior to becoming a writer, and the decision to write his first novel occurred out of the blue during a baseball game he was watching. He writes about the importance of physical health and mental toughness in becoming a successful novelist, something he¡¯²õ written about at length in his previous nonfiction book, What I Talk About When I Talk About Running. He was surprisingly tactical in his approach to reaching a wide English-speaking audience, by having already-translated manuscripts to hand before approaching powerful people connected to famous authors he¡¯d translated into Japanese.

There¡¯²õ really not a lot here though that¡¯ll grab most people, including Murakami fans. Many of Murakami¡¯²õ revelations could¡¯ve been condensed into a single essay, so that a lot of the time you¡¯re having to indulge a dreary old man¡¯²õ ramblings to make some very unimpressive statements. His insights and processes are things you can find in most how-to writing manuals already out there. In fact I would say Stephen King¡¯²õ On Writing is a vastly more successful book of this type, both as a memoir (which is short but riveting) and a how-to manual (not in terms of helpfulness, which it isn¡¯t really - unless you want to write like King, ie. badly and excessively - but in terms of saying the same things Murakami is saying but more succinctly and memorably).

Novelist As a Vocation is poor both as a memoir - which is generally vague and dull - and a how-to manual on writing - which is surface-level at best and fails to address the many nuances that goes into writing a novel. If he makes one good point, it¡¯²õ that writing novels doesn¡¯t have to be an art - something I think his ever-villainous critics seem to have driven home to him over the years, but which also may ease the pressure on writers starting out. And I think most people wanting to learn how to write would do well to steer clear of procrastination-inducing books like this and figure out what methods work for themselves by actually doing it - which is Murakami¡¯²õ long drawn-out conclusion as well (the latter, not the former), and which is also one that¡¯²õ echoed from numerous other books of this ilk, again, typical of much of this book¡¯²õ material: derivative and underwhelming.
Profile Image for ?ngela Arcade.
Author?1 book4,332 followers
February 4, 2024
4.5. Una zambullida por la mente de un escritor fuera de serie; un viaje por sus procesos cognitivos frente a la creaci¨®n literaria y la sociedad en la que esta prolifera. No es una gu¨ªa para escritores, pero es una experiencia que a veces refleja nuestro sentir, y a veces propone otra visi¨®n sobre el oficio de escribir. Aprend¨ª un mont¨®n de este librito.
Profile Image for Caro the Helmet Lady.
819 reviews428 followers
December 1, 2020
This book presents a collection of essays written by Murakami for some Japanese magazine. This is not a bad thing at all, but it shows - the author is repeating himself a lot. That's not a very big deal though for a fan.
What we got here is a self portrait of a down to earth and very humble person, the one that can't be faked. Murakami is writing and talking from the heart and not for a second he's boasting. He's just saying things and sharing his musings on basically everything, not just writing, with readers. If someone doesn't like him or his books - that's their right, but not my problem. I definitely enjoyed this one. Made me nostalgic for some of his older books...
Profile Image for Pakinam Mahmoud.
990 reviews4,701 followers
December 10, 2024
"???? ?? ???? ?????? ?? ????? ????? ???? ???? ????? ????. ??? ?? ???? ??? ??? ???? ????? ??? ????? ?????? ?????? ?????.."
??? ?? ????? ???? ?????? ???? ???? ?? ??????????

????? ???? ??? ?? ???? ???? ? ?? ???? ?? ???? ?? ???? ? ?? ???? ???? ????? ?? ??????...
?? ???????? ??? ?????? ?????? ????? ???? ??? ???? ????? ??? ??? ?????? ??????...

????? ?? ???????..???? ????? ?? ?????? ?? ???????? ??? ???????? ?? ??????? ????? ?? ??? ????...
?????? ?????? ??? ??? ????? ?????? ? ???? ????? ???????..???? ?? ????? ??? ?????? ??? ?? ??? ??? ?? ???? ??? ????? ???? ? ????? ?? ?? ????? ?????? ?? ?? ?? ????? ??? ???? ??????? ? ????? ??? ..

"?????? ?? ???? ?? ?????? ????? ??? ????? ?????? ??? ??????? ??? ??????? ??? ?? ???? ???????? ????? ?? ???? ???????? ???? ????. ??????? ?? ???? ??? ??????? ????? ??? ??? ??????.."

???????? ???? ???..????? ..???? ?????..?? ????? ???? ???? ??????? ? ??? ????? ???? ???? ????? ???? ??? ????? ?? ?? ????? ??????..????? ???? ??? ???? ?? ?? ??? ..???? ?? ????? ???? ????? ?? ??? ????? ????? ???? ???? ??????? ??? ????? ???? ??? ????? ?????? ??????? ??? ???? ????? ???? ????? ???? ?? ?????..

????? ???? ????? ?? ??????? ?????? ?? ????? ?????? ??? ?????? ?????? ????? ??????? ? ???? ??? ??? ?? ??? ????? ???? ?? ????? ???? ? ?????? ?????? ?????? ????? ??????? ???????? ???? ?? ???????? ???.?

???? ?? ????? ???????? ? ???? ??? ?? ???? ?? ???? ??
Profile Image for Harun Ahmed.
1,468 reviews354 followers
March 21, 2023
????????? ????????? ????, ???????? ?????? ?? ??????, ??????????, ?????? ???? ???????, ?????? ???? ??? ????? ?????????? ??????? ????, ??????? ????? ??????????, ????????? ????????? ?????????, ????? ??????????, ??????????????? ??? ???? ?????? ??????? ?????? ???? ???? ??? ???? ???? ?????? ???? ???? ???????? ????? ???? ??????? ??? ???? ???????? ????????? ??????? ???? - ???? ??????? ???? ?????? ?????? ???? ????????? ???? ??? ? ?????? ???? ????? ????? ?????? ???????? ???????? ???? ????? ??? ????? ?????? ? ??????????? ??????? ???? ?????? ????? ??????? "regarding schools." ????????? ???? ??? ???? ??????? ????? ?????????? ??? ???? ????? ??? ???? ???? ?? ????????? ????? ??????? ??????? ???? ?????? ?????? ??? ??? ??????, ?????? ??? ??? ???? ???????? ???? ?????? ?????? ???, ???? ??????? ??? ??? ?????? ?????????? ????? ??? ??? ?????? ???? ???? ????? ?????????????????????? ?????? ???? ??? ? ?????? ??????? ???? ????????? ???????? ? ?????? ???????? ?????? ?????? ???????

?????? ???, ????? ???????? ? ???? ????????? ????? ???? ???? ???????? ??????? ????????? ??, ???? ? ??????? ????????????
Profile Image for Elyse Walters.
4,010 reviews11.7k followers
January 7, 2023
Audiobook¡­.read by Kotaro
Watanabe
¡­¡­7 hours and 35 minutes

First published in 2015 in Japanese.
I¡¯m glad it was translated in English.
I enjoyed Murakami¡¯²õ thoughts- his feelings - his compassion¡­.and his professional views about writing a novel.

As purely a reader (and only a sharing-type-writer) ¡­.
I totally get what he was saying about the difference between the person who writes one novel, maybe even two novels than the person who has invested his time over a 30 year. (which Murakami has done)

I loved learning about Murakami¡¯²õ younger days - his frugal life with his wife . . .
¡°When the nights were cold, we clang to each other with our cat¡±.

When even younger ¡ª
Murakami sounded like an adorable, hopeless, spoiled, only child, unaware kid ¡ª ordinary ¡ª in the best of ways.

The gritty-street-wise, young man, was a better fit for Murakami than studying at the University.
´¡²Ô»å¡­.
¡°Nobody could take away his love of books and music¡±.

I loved that he ran a jazz-cafe.
±á²¹³ó²¹¡­.
¡­.He said he was screwed over but he didn¡¯t get into it much¡­..
He does have one redeeming feature, he says¡­
¡°I work my butt off when it¡¯²õ something I like¡±.

When he talked about the literary world, I was a little less interested and don¡¯t know if I fully understand what he was saying¡­.
¡­. Other than he removed himself in the literary world. He was clear he never set out to be a writer in the first place.
¡°He was just an ordinary guy who happened to top off a novel¡±.
He also had a full-time job, and he was too busy to do anything other than focus on his own work.

Murakami¡¯²õ thoughts about originality was interesting¡ª with examples about the work of ¡®The Beach Boys¡¯ and ¡®The Beatles¡¯.

This was a wonderful ¡®non-novel¡¯ about novel writing.
I laughed!
I smiled!
I found the audiobook endearing!!
Profile Image for ???? ???? ????.
997 reviews1,166 followers
September 16, 2024

"???? ?????? ?? ???????? ??? ??????? ????? ??? ?????? ????. ???? ?? ???? ????? ?? ???????? ???? ???? ???? ????. ??? ?? ???? ??? ??? ???? ?????? ??? ????? ?????? ???? ?????".

??? ???? ???? ?????? ???????? ??????: "?? ????? ??? ??? ????? ?? ?????" ?????? ??????? ??? ????? ?? ???? ????? ?????? ???? ???? ???? ??? ???? ???? ?? ?????? ???? ?? ????? ?? ???? ?? ?????? ?????? ??????? ?????? ?? ?????? ????????? ???? ???? "????? ?? ???????" ??? ??? ?????? ???? ????? ???? ?????? ?? ?????? ?????? ???????? ?? ?????? ???? ??? ???? ???? ????? ????? ?????? ?????? ??? ??? ?? ??? ?????? ??? ?? ???? ??????? ??? ????? ?????? ?? ?? ??? ????? ????????? ????? ??? ?? ????? ????? ??? ?? ????? ??? ???? ?? ???? ?? ???? ???? ??????? ?? ????? ?? ???? ??????? ?? ?????? ?????? ????? ???? ??????? ?? ???? ?????? ??? ???????? ???? ??? ???????? ????? ??? ??? ???? ?? ?????? ??????? ??????? ????? ??? ??????? ???? ????? ???? ???? "?????? ????????".

????? ???? ?????? ??? ???? ??????? ?????? ?????? ?????? ?? ?????? ???????? ??? ?????? ?????? ??????? ??????? ?? ???? ????? ?????? ???? ?????? ?? ?????? ?????? ?????? ?????? ?? ??????? ????????? ????? ??? ????? ????????? ??? ??????? ??????? ????? ????? ???? ?????? ???????? ??????? ?????? ??????? ???? ??? ???? ??????? ?? ???? ????? ???????? ???? ???? ?????? ?????? ?? ????? ??????? ??? ???? ????? ?????? ????? ?? ???? ???? ?????? ??????? ?????? ????????? ???? ??????? ?????? ?? ?????? ???? ???? ?? ???? ???? ?? ??????? ??? ???? ????? ????? ???? ?????? ??? ?????? ??????? ???? ????? ??? ????? ????? ????? ???????? ?? ???? ??? ???? ????? ????? ???? ?????? ????? ??????? ??? ???? ??? ?????? ?? ????? ???? ????? ?? ??????? ????? ?????? ????? ???? ???????!

???? ??? ?????? ???? ??? ?????? ????? ?????? ?????? ??????? ???? ??? ??? ??? ????? ????? ?????? ?? ????? ??????? ?????? ???? ??? ?? ???? ???? ???????? ????? ????? ?? ?????? ?? ??? ????? ??? ????? ???? ???? ?????? ???? ????? ????? ??? ?? ?? ?????? "?????? ????????" ?? ?????? ??????? ????? ?? ?? ????? ????? ?? ???? ?????? ???? ??????.

??????..
???? ?????? ??????? ????? ???? ?? ????? ?????? ???????? ????????? ??? ??? ???? ??????? ???? ?? ???? ????? ????? ?? ???? ??? ????? ?????? ?????? ?? ?????? ?? ?????? ???????? ??????? ???? ??? ??? ?????? ?????? ????? ??? ???? ?????? ???????? ??? ???? ?? ?????? ?? ??? ?? ???? ???? ?? ???? ???? ????? ??????? ???? ???? ??????? ??????? ????? ??? ??? ??????? ?????? ???????? ??????? ?? ???? ?? ????? ????????: ?????? ????????.

3.5/5
Profile Image for Alan.
700 reviews293 followers
October 30, 2023
Quick and fun reacquaintance with my friend, Mr. Murakami. I enjoyed some of the bits about his idea of what a novelist is, how to write a novel, what characters to include, and who to write for. And I¡¯ll tell ya (with only a tiny bit of facetiousness on my end) that my previous assumptions about his process weren¡¯t too far off the mark. What is his process? Well, at base, just vibes. Just vibes.

Outside of vibes (and lots of vibes), there won¡¯t be too much to sink your teeth into. The aspiring novelist or writer may find good nuggets here and there (such as ¡°read as much as you can¡±, hardly a novel idea), but this one is generally just a victory lap for his works and his remarkable career. I was okay with it.
Profile Image for inciminci.
582 reviews289 followers
December 5, 2022
Murakami telling he loves readers who read his books, don't just toss them aside when they're done, re-consider and think about what he wrote while other authors attack reviewers on GR and twitter ?
I went to a book store today after work and bought Norwegian Wood after reading that.
Profile Image for Lee Klein .
878 reviews980 followers
January 24, 2024
Went to a respected independent bookstore in Princeton NJ, thinking I would perform a sort of community service and buy two new hardcover novels. Balked at the price. $28 each? Just couldn't do it. Instead I picked up a sweet "storybook" edition of Helen DeWitt's The English Understand Wool, which I had read twice as an ebook, and this, in part because when I picked it up I read that Murakami has a minimum word count of 1600 words a day. I've recently established a 300 words a day minimum quota, so opening to this page, my eye going directly to Murakami's minimum word count, seemed like a sign to acquire this. I also enjoyed his book about writing and running back in the early days of this website (2008), and I always feel like I should know his novels better than I do.

Single lingering impression: author does not once acknowledge that he does not have children. At no point does he address the reader who may have parental obligations, never mentions anything related, which makes a lot of what he says about his process and his movement through life as a writer seem sort of stunted by his total freedom. He can move from Japan when he wants to, he can spend six hours writing and then run an hour every day, and then nap or read or translate or whatever, largely because he doesn't have children. Or at least that's what I kept saying aloud to the text. Dude, you clearly don't have kids . . .

Otherwise, this is perfectly enjoyable, if not all that illuminating. The sort of thing you can read as your child streams Octonauts and screams at you every few minutes to give her the Switch even though her behavior at school that day precludes an hour of electronics. Word count is padded by self-mitigation and humble qualifications that get a little irritating, but his intuitive, obsessive, committed respect for the mystery of his production and even his popularity is all admirable and interesting enough. It's all very readable but not difficult or technical. At times he diverges in territory that doesn't quite seem related but it's no problem to accelerate one's reading pace through prose like this. Toward the end, particularly talking about his relationships with the most respected people and publications in the New York literary world, it all starts to sound somewhat excessive, like bragging, although he is proud of what he's achieved over thirty years of consistent committed work, always attempting to extend what he can do.

Overall, an impulse buy in an independent bookstore that yielded more or less what I expected it would: a semi-inspiring example of how an idiosyncratic unconventional author has managed to do it for decades.
Profile Image for Andrew Smith.
1,202 reviews925 followers
September 26, 2023
This book comprises a series of essays on the author¡¯²õ thoughts on writing. They¡¯re structured quite informally, being almost conversational in their style. Murakami reflects on his writing life and details how he prepares for and executes particular tasks, be they writing a full novel or something smaller. A few things struck me:

1. In an early piece he ventures that regular readers amount to only one in twenty of the general population. That seems very low to me and might be challenged by a small amount of independent research I¡¯ve carried out (i.e. just a basic Google search). It seems that the figure is hard to pin down and is impacted by such matters who to include or exclude, levels of literacy in some parts of the world etc. But if true, does that make us members of a fairly exclusive club?

2. I didn¡¯t realise that he works as a translator (English to Japanese) in addition to producing his own compositions. He fits this in around his other writing tasks, sometimes to give his mind some release (a breaker) from the intense focus he has on whatever else he¡¯²õ working on.

3. The number of re-writes he goes through when working on a novel makes it seem like a totally exhausting process. When he¡¯²õ completed around four re-writes he then seeks views from trusted sources (notably his wife) before launching into even more re-writes. Then he gets the text translated from Japanese to English ¨C using a tried and tested (to him) translator ¨C and only then will he provide a copy to an editor. Then the work with the editor begins¡­

4. He uses a process of filing away useful pieces of information or thoughts into mental cabinets ¨C he doesn¡¯t write this stuff down. When he¡¯²õ got enough information stored ¨C but not before ¨C he¡¯ll begin writing. For his novels he hoards his most preciously guarded cabinets.

5. He runs every day for about an hour and has done for thirty years. He believes that for him to write successfully he has to take care of his body as well as his mind. Note: his book was an inspiration for me to complete my first ultramarathon, something he¡¯²õ done on a number of occasions.

Overall, a fascinating insight into the mind of this wonderful and, I think, truly original author.

My thanks to Random House UK for providing a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Amabilis.
114 reviews14 followers
November 9, 2019
Murakami je dugo kombinirao ovu knjigu, pisao izme?u pisanja drugih knjiga, kao neku svoju potrebu da najprije sebi, a onda i svojim ?itateljima pribli?i sve ono ?to ga je dovelo gdje sada je,ali i na?ine kako je to ostvario. Pritom Murakami ne dijeli savjete mladim piscima ili onima koji bi to htjeli biti, jer je kako sam ka?e nepopravljivi individualist i uvijek sve radi prema onomu ?to sam osje?a, bez obzira na tu?a mi?ljenja. On pi?e o svom putu, svojim odabirima i bez puno uzro?no posljedi?nih poja?njenja govori da je slijedio sebe, svoj osje?aj. Kad razmislim, ni?ta drugo i ne postoji istinski za svaku osobu, osim na?eg osje?aja, jedino ?to je stvarno je taj osje?aj, sva tu?a mi?ljenja i kritike su samo prde? u vjetru, u odnosu na na?u istinu. zanimljivo je kako Mukrakami smatra da za biti pisac romana uop?e nije potrebno biti o?trouman, kao recimo u to?no definiranim tehni?kim strukama, ve? treba biti dovoljno spor kako bi stigao sve promotriti bez osu?ivanja, biti oko koje ima pogled sa svih strana.
Zanimljiv je opis na?ina kako Murakami pi?e romane, njegovi rituali i discipliniranost, a meni se svi?a kako je njegova ?ena taj prvi i glavni korektiv njegovih romana. On nju ovdje spominje, ali mo?da i nedovoljno, ?ini mi se da je ona taj sigurni stup kada on zapetljan u ma?tu odluta, razumno mu uka?e na sve stvari koje bi mogao popraviti ili urediti.
Murakami najvi?e cijeni svoje ?itatelje i njihove utiske na njegove knjige, ali ne pi?e radi njih, ve? kako sam ka?e radi sebe, to je jednostavno njegova potreba. Iako se u nekim dijelovima ?ini neiskren i nerazumljiv poput opisa da je zaboravio na roman koji je napisao, ili da je skroz isklju?io iz pam?enja neke stvari, valjda je i to mogu?e. Murakami ne crpi snagu pisanja iz sje?anja poput nekih pisaca, nego nama?tava likove i svijet pa je o?ito njegova potreba da ostane "prazan" iskrena, dok pisci koji su optere?eni svojim osobnim do?ivljajima potaknuti da se "isprazne" preko pisanja.
Murakami u jednom dijelu ka?e ,citiram "Nikako da na miru predahnem (kada ovako pogledam unazad, sve mi se ?ini da je upravo to "nikako da na miru predahnem" lajtmotiv mog ?ivota.". Posljednja pjesma koju je napisao Ivo Andri? 1973. ima naziv "Ni bogova ni molitava". Ide ovako:
Ni bogova ni molitava!
Pa ipak biva ponekad da ?ujem
Ne?to kao molitven ?apat u sebi.

To se javlja moja stara i ve?no ?iva ?elja
Javlja odnekud iz dubina
I tihim glasom tra?i malo mesta
U nekom od beskrajnih vrtova rajskih,
Gde bih najposle na?ao ono
?to sam oduvek uzalud tra?io ovde:
?irinu i prostranstvo, otvoren vidik,
Malo slobodna daha.

Zanimljivo je kako piscima, iako su jedna od najosamljenijih bi?a na svijetu, uvijek nedostaje daha i samo?e. Valjda nam nikad dosta onoga ?to nam predstavlja sve.
Profile Image for holden.
623 reviews10 followers
November 11, 2021
Otkako sam postao pisac i po?eo redovno da objavljujem knjige, nau?io sam jednu lekciju. Kako god ne?to da napi?ete, na kraju ?e negde neko o vama govoriti lo?e. Na primer, ako napi?ete dug roman, re?i ?e vam: "Predugo. Razvu?eno. Sigurno je moglo i da se prepolovi." Ako napi?ete kratko, onda ka?u: "Sredi?nji deo je slab. ?upalj. Jasno je da nema snagu." Za isti roman na jednom mestu mi ka?u: "Ponavlja se, prerasta u kli?e. Dosadno je", dok mi ne drugom mestu govore: "Prethodni je bio bolji. Nova postavka se vrti uprazno." Kad malo razmislim, ve? oko dvadeset i pet godina mi govore: "Murakami, ti kasni? za sada?njim vremenom. Dosta je." Lako je prigovarati (mo?ete da ka?ete ?to god vam padne na pamet a da ne preuzimate nikakvu odgovornost), ali ako onaj kome se prigovara obra?a pa?nju na svaku re?, to uop?te ne?e biti dobro po njegovo zdravlje. Zato glasno treba re?i: "Ba? me briga! Ionako ?e mi sva?ta re?i. Zato ?u pisati ono o ?emu ?elim da pi?em i onako kako ja to ho?u!"

- Haruki Murakami, "Pisac kao profesija"
Profile Image for Matthew Ted.
937 reviews969 followers
November 14, 2022
123rd book of 2022.

Naturally this is marketed as 'writing advice' more than anything else, but the title is Novelist as a Vocation, and therefore some of the later essays do lean more in that direction, though more on this later. Murakami remains in my head as the writer I fell in love with in my early 20s and devoured at university. On several occasions I remember sitting on the huge beanbag we had in my student house with a glass of rum and coke and reading his books cover-to-cover, like some Murakami character myself. These are, of course, very fond memories. Sadly, after not reading him for some time (I actually read his novels in order of publication, starting right at the beginning), I read the next one in my list, his newer beast, 1Q84, and almost hated it. I found myself seeing and criticising all the things I had seen Murakami criticised for in the past. I presumed my phase was over, doomed to forever remain as an 'early 20s' thing. I'm still yet to read his latest two novels.

And yet, when I saw this being advertised, I felt the rare itch of needing to buy a new book. On Sunday, I found myself in a new (I think) bookshop in the small English town of Arundel, with this new Murakami book on the shelf, and thought, actually more than Murakami and my desire to read it, I wanted to support the establishment. I almost never buy books at full price (or at all: most of my reading directions are controlled by what is available at my local library). Having studied Creative Writing for 4 years, and frequently writing and submitting short stories myself (with, so far, not masses amount of luck), I thought my old Murakami could help me. After all, his book on running once motivated me to buy expensive running shoes and start jogging when I lived away from home, a habit that didn't survive my return. The early essays do have Murakami's simple stoicism I once fell in love with. It reminded me of his old characters I used to read, their simple, selfish and humble way of life that for some reason felt relatable to me at university. I think Murakami is the perfect writer for our early 20s. For a man who isn't overly fond of the public eye, the essays are quite personal and reflect a lot about his writing life and his career. This would be my first point in a succinct review: this book is probably only worthwhile to an already established fan of Murakami. One essay is his reflections on schooling and in particular, Japanese schooling. The final essay is a walkthrough of his US breakout and success. Looking back, there isn't much hard 'advice', but really just Murakami musing pleasantly in his musing way. He has always been very similar to his characters, after all. Google 'Murakami Bingo' and you'll encounter his trademarks quickly enough.

So this is a book for fans. Anyone looking for real writing advice from him will possibly be disappointed. There's some good bits, some interesting bits too (by interesting I often mean, bits I don't necessarily agree with). In the beginning he talks about the type of person who has what it takes to be a writer and Murakami argues that those who are very/too clever, do not have what it takes. The novel, he argues, is a long way of working out what someone wants to say; therefore, someone smart can already formulate their ideas and have them ready to be presented: this defeats the need for a novel, according to Murakami. He also talks a lot about the unconscious in writing and how organic the process is, which was interesting (and slightly too late) as I wrote one of my MA essays on unconscious writing and Finnegans Wake. To Murakami, writing is just taking lots of random things out of a proverbial garage and assembling them into something magical.
Profile Image for Marijana??.
649 reviews83 followers
July 17, 2019
Ova ocena neka se protuma?i kao "nisam dala subjektivnosti da prevagne", a na mo?ete saznati ne?to vi?e o samoj knjizi.
Profile Image for Yukari Peerless.
66 reviews17 followers
September 23, 2015
This was unexpectedly personal stories written by Murakami himself on writing. It was inspiring and encouraging. I have a feeling I will re-read this many times.
Profile Image for Arelis Uribe.
Author?8 books1,602 followers
January 17, 2018
Me cost¨® leer este libro, tuve que dejar de leer en la p¨¢gina 200 y empezar todo de nuevo porque estaba leyendo como cuando ten¨ªa diez a?os y le¨ªa de corrido sin entender, solo avanzando para terminar el libro y dar la prueba. Lo que me distrajo y me impidi¨® enganchar es la voz, la traductora o traductor. Usa demasiados adverbios de mente y eso me cansa, siento que es recurso de alguien que reposa demasiado en caracterizaciones f¨¢ciles. En fin. He le¨ªdo dos libros de Murakami, los dos de no ficci¨®n: Underground y ¨¦ste. Y mientras le¨ªa, pensaba en la distancia de la traducci¨®n. Una nunca lee a Murakami, una lee una traducci¨®n del japon¨¦s al ingl¨¦s y del ingl¨¦s al espa?ol. Entonces hay muchas personas entre el autor y quien lo lee. Una accede a las ideas en el sentido m¨¢s absoluto, limpio y sint¨¦tico. Una accede a "el qu¨¦", al contenido, pero a menos que lea a Murakami en japon¨¦s nunca voy a poder acceder a su est¨¦tica, a sus formas, al sabor de su prosa, al color de su voz, a su cadencia y su musicalidad. Es una pena, es el desaf¨ªo de la traducci¨®n. Superado eso (obviado, m¨¢s bien), me decid¨ª a releerlo y soltar sin pensar mucho en la prosa (que me carg¨®). Igual me pude entregar al libro. Y lo disfrut¨¦. Tiene frases lindas, reflexiones con las que me sent¨ª identificada y experiencias que espero que me pasen o disposiciones a las que quiero aspirar, como que me importe cada vez menos la cr¨ªtica (proveniente de un c¨ªrculo de autoridad o de lectores comunes) o entregarme m¨¢s al proceso de la escritura, a disfrutar esto porque es lo que amo. Un amigo me pregunt¨® si me hab¨ªa gustado m¨¢s ¨¦ste o el de Stephen King, On writing y ni siquiera lo hab¨ªa pensado, creo que los rankings no tienen sentido, pero ya, juguemos a eso un poco y s¨ª, me gust¨® m¨¢s el de Stephen King. Ese est¨¢ dividido en dos partes, la primera es una novela autobiogr¨¢fica en la que King cuenta c¨®mo se convierte en escritor y tiene eso, que me imagino que es talento de best seller, que es lograr encontrar en la corriente subterr¨¢nea de la no ficci¨®n los componentes de la ficci¨®n (a alguien le le¨ª esa frase, no recuerdo a qui¨¦n), entonces tiene cierres con golpes de efecto, coincidencias, suspenso, pausas, giros inesperados. Es un maestro de contar bien, de agarrar la realidad y convertirla en el gui¨®n de una pel¨ªcula hollywoodense. La segunda parte es un ensayo, tambi¨¦n autobiogr¨¢fico, sobre el ejercicio de escribir y tiene tips y consejos y aprendizajes. No s¨¦ po, habla sobre la pertinencia (o no) de que incluso las frases tengan estructura con remate en el final o de la importancia de la estructura sujeto-verbo-predicado. Es un gran libro. En cambio, Murakami divaga mucho, repite como cinco veces que es escritor de novelas hace 35 a?os. No entiendo por qu¨¦ necesita repetirlo tanto si ya lo dijo una vez. El estilo de Murakami es m¨¢s de ir avanzando nom¨¢s, sin cabecearse demasiado en esos jueguitos narrativos que llenan las historias de efectos especiales. Y qu¨¦ patuda de criticarlo porque yo tambi¨¦n escribo as¨ª. Pero filo. Me gust¨®, pero hay libros metaliterarios que me gustan m¨¢s.
Ahora, las frases que subray¨¦.

"Los escritores no destacan por tener un punto de vista parcial sobre las cosas".
"(La escritura) supone una cadena infinita de par¨¢frasis".
"Los escritores son seres necesitados de algo innecesario".
"La vida no transcurre como uno la imagina".
"?ramos j¨®venes y ansi¨¢bamos hacer cosas a pesar de que nadie gan¨® dinero con ello".
"Las palabras tienen poder y ese poder hay que saber usarlo".
"Por muy ocupado que estuviera, por muy apretada que resultara mi vida, leer supon¨ªa la misma alegr¨ªa que escuchar m¨²sica".
"Es natural que fuera incapaz de producir algo decente. Nunca antes lo hab¨ªa hecho y es pr¨¢cticamente imposible lograrlo a la primera".
"Olvida todas tus ideas preconcebidas sobre las novelas y la literatura y escribe a placer con total libertad sobre lo que sientes, sobre lo que ocurre en tu mente".
"Me serv¨ªa de las palabras m¨¢s sencillas posibles para transmitir contenidos no tan sencillos".
"No hace falta recurrir a palabras dif¨ªciles ni a giros complejos para que la gente te entienda".
"El idioma es fuerte por naturaleza".
"Sin ese esp¨ªritu aventurero nunca nacer¨¢ nada nuevo".
"Quiz¨¢ no escribo del todo con la cabeza, sino con cierto sentido corporal, como si fijase el ritmo con unos buenos acordes y me dejase llevar despu¨¦s por el poder de la improvisaci¨®n".
"Al escribirla no me divert¨ªa porque lo hac¨ªa forzando un estilo que no me sal¨ªa de forma natural".
"Si escribir no resulta divertido, no tiene ning¨²n sentido hacerlo".
"Lo que suceda a partir de ahora simplemente suceder¨¢" [amo esta frase, es una lecci¨®n de vida contra la ansiedad].
"Sin cierta arrogancia es imposible convertirse en escritor".
"Hay cosas mucho m¨¢s importantes para un escritor que los premios literarios. Una de esas cosas es tener claro en tu interior que con tus manos produces algo con sentido".
"La calidad de una obra literaria no se puede materializar en una forma concreta, pero un premio o una medalla parecen otorgarle una".
"La responsabilidad m¨¢s grande del escritor es para consigo mismo, con su trabajo, con alcanzar la m¨¢xima calidad de la que es capaz y ofrecer el resultado a los lectores".
"Opiniones diversas esconden circunstancias diversas, posiciones ante la vida divergentes, pensamientos y formas de vivir peculiares".
"La creaci¨®n se refiere a romper con un punto de vista existente".
"El trabajo de un escritor se parece, en mayor o menor medida, al de los ilusionistas".
"Decid¨ª hacer lo que quer¨ªa y c¨®mo lo quer¨ªa (porque) s¨®lo se vive una vez".
"Escribir a mi manera, escribir lo que me apetec¨ªa".
"Escudri?ar lo que hay en ti en lugar de sumar algo a ti".
"No codiciaba nada. No sab¨ªa nada del panorama literario del momento. S¨®lo pretend¨ªa escribir algo a mi manera y reflejar con ello el estado de mi coraz¨®n" [ay, ¨¦sta me mat¨®, porque as¨ª me sent¨ªa yo antes de Quiltras].
"Los materiales se acumulan en mi interior, como el agua del deshielo se acumula en los embalses. Entonces, un buen d¨ªa me siento a la mesa de trabajo incapaz de aguantar m¨¢s y me pongo a escribir".
"Adquirir el h¨¢bito de observar en todos sus detalles los fen¨®menos y acontecimientos que tienen lugar delante de nuestros ojos. Cualquier cosa, por peque?a que sea, de lo que ocurre con las personas que le rodean a uno, reflexionar sobre ello".
"Construir frases, es decir, escribir".
"Conserva lo importante, elimina lo superfluo".
"James Joyce aseguraba que la imaginaci¨®n es memoria".
"Constru¨ªa frases como si tocara m¨²sica".
"Las diferencias entre una y otra no son tantas como para convertir esto en un problema".
"Cualquier cuesti¨®n que implique experiencias es crucial para un escritor".
"S¨®lo s¨¦ escribir as¨ª y no me queda m¨¢s remedio que hacerlo, ?qu¨¦ tiene eso de malo?".
"Por mi edad no creo que llegue a verlo, espero que alguien pueda verlo por m¨ª".
"Dar forma a ciertas cosas que habitan en mi coraz¨®n".
"Una historia que podr¨ªa llegar a cambiarme".
"Isaak Dinsen afirm¨®: 'Escribo todos los d¨ªas poco a poco, sin esperanza ni desesperanza'".
"Es imposible alcanzar la perfecci¨®n en una frase".
"Las opiniones son el mundo en s¨ª mismo".
"Raymond Carver (...) escribi¨® haciendo suyo el leitmotiv de otro autor: 'Al fin he entendido que una novela se perfecciona despu¨¦s de releerla, de quitarle algunas comas y volver a leerla una vez m¨¢s poner las comas en el mismo sitio done estaban'".
"He escrito siempre lo que quer¨ªa, cuando quer¨ªa y como quer¨ªa".
"Las cr¨ªticas no van a lograr que pierda la confianza ni que me d¨¦ por vencido".
"Me he esforzado hasta el ¨²ltimo aliento para dar lo mejor de m¨ª mismo".
"Una vez que se empieza a escribir quien lo hace est¨¢ solo".
"Hay que escribir una novela para comprender la dimensi¨®n de la soledad".
"Una asociaci¨®n de alcoh¨®licos an¨®nimos en Estados Unidos tiene un eslogan que dice as¨ª: 'One day at a time'. El ¨²nico camino es mantener el ritmo, resistir con firmeza el paso de los d¨ªas".
"El fundamento de todo escritor es contar una historia".
"Por mucho que me repita que hoy no deber¨ªa beber, al final saco una cerveza de la nevera y me la tomo" [YO].
"Solo puedo escribir de esa manera, solo puedo vivir as¨ª".
"Mi punto de vista sobre la realidad se enriqueci¨® al experimentar como propios los sentimientos que describ¨ªan los libros".
"Para escribir una novela hay que leer muchos libros".
"Escribir es convertirme en quien quiera a voluntad".
"Cuando una novela se encarrila bien, los personajes terminan por moverse solos y la historia avanza por s¨ª misma".
"Los sue?os normalmente no se eligen".
"Si disfruto al escribir estoy seguro de que habr¨¢ lectores en alguna parte que disfrutar¨¢n conmigo".
"Haga uno lo que haga, siempre habr¨¢ alguien que lo criticar¨¢".
"Rick Nelson: 'Si no eres capaz de hacer disfrutar a los dem¨¢s, no te queda m¨¢s remedio que disfrutar t¨²'".
"Convertirlos en adictos a lo que uno hace, crear un v¨ªnculo imposible de cortar, una relaci¨®n en la que el lector casi no puede esperar a la siguiente dosis".
"Una persona con defectos solo podr¨¢ escribir una novela con defectos".
"La ¨²nica cosa a la que hay que temer de verdad es morir rodeado de aduladores y alabanzas".
"Las novelas brotan con naturalidad del interior de uno mismo. No se construyen a punta de estrategia".
"Ser original, tener un estilo propio era y es uno de los mayores elogios que se le pueden dedicar a alguien".
"La narrativa como tal existe como met¨¢fora de la realidad circundante".
"Alfred Birnbaum traduce con libertad y Jay Rubin con fidelidad" [sobre sus traductores del japon¨¦s al ingl¨¦s].
"En Occidente se tiene un gran sentido de la persona como individuo".
"Escribo como lo hago porque no s¨¦ hacerlo de otra manera".
"S¨®lo logro poner en orden lo que pienso cuando escribo".

Agradecimientos especiales al Jumo, que me regal¨® el libro a cambio de que le editara un texto.
Profile Image for ????? ?????.
291 reviews69 followers
March 1, 2025
?????? ?? ?????? ?? ???? ??? ??? ?? ???? ?????? ??? ????? ?????? ?????? ?? ????? ????? ????? ??? ?????? ??? ??????? ?? ??? ????? ?? ????? ?? ??????? ??? ???? ??? ?????? ????? ???? ?? ????? ???????? ?????? ??????? ?? ??????? ??????? ???.

??????? ?? ???? ????? ?????? ?????? ??? ??? ?????? ?????? ?? ????? ??? ?? ???? ??????? ????? ?? ??????? ????????? ???? ???? ???? ????? ??? ??? ???? ??? ??? ?????? ?? ???? ?????? ?????? ???? ?????? ???? ??? ?????? ???? ??????.

????? ?? ??????? ???? ????? ??? ??? ???? ???? ???? ?????? ?? ???? ??????? ?? ??? ????? ???? ?????? ?????? ????? ??? ?????. ??? ??????? ?? ?????? ??? ???? ????? ?????? ????? ??? ??????? ?? ?? ???? ????? ???? ?????? ?????? ??? ???? ????? ?? ?????? ??????? ???? ??????? ?????.

?????? ??? ??? ?? ?????? ??? ????? ????? ???? ???? ???? ?????? ???? ???? ?? ????? ?? ????????? ???? ????? ??? ?????? ???? ???? ??? ????? ??? ?? ??? ????? ???? ?? ?????? ??? ???? ????? ?? ?????? ?????? ????? ??????? ?????? ???? ????????? ???? ????. ?
Profile Image for Liesa.
293 reviews228 followers
October 26, 2016
Ich bin so dankbar, vor einigen Jahren auf Murakamis Romane gesto?en zu sein - f¨¹r mich ist er definitiv einer der interessantesten und inspirierendsten Pers?nlichkeiten und das auf eine so unfassbar sympathische und ruhige Art und Weise. Ich werde wohl niemals genug von seinen Werken bekommen und kann diese Sammlung von Essays an all diejenigen, die seine Romane und Kurzgeschichten sch?tzen, nur w?rmstens weiterempfehlen!
Profile Image for Robert Khorsand.
356 reviews328 followers
December 24, 2022
English Edition (No spoilers)
Murakami is my favorite author and one of the famous author who shares his experiences of becoming a writer in this book.
This book contains eleven chapters in which span his writing career from the beginning to becoming famous:
1.Are Novelists Broad-minded?
2.When I Became a Novelist
3.On Literary Prizes
4.On Originality
5.So What Should I Write About?
6.Making Time Your Ally: On Writing a Novel
7.A Completely Personal and Physical Occupation
8.Regarding Schools
9.What Kind of Characters Should I Include?
10.Who Do I Write For?
11.Going Abroad: A New Frontier
Murakami never attended writing classes nor was he a particularly good student. What he was though was an avid reader with an inner will.
He remains humble as to his own talents and encourages others to pursue their desire to write. He presents no rules other than to spend time writing and reading and paying attention to creative and imaginative ideas.
As a man who loves him and his unique lifestyle, I changed my crappy lifestyle, quit smoking, lost nearly hundred pounds, took up running, became a professional runner, ran two marathons and I'm getting ready to Dubai Marathon in FEB 12, 2023.
Well I love anything he writes, that's all I can say about him.
**
?????? ????? (???? ????? ???? ?????)
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?? ??? ??????? ??? ?????? ????? ?? ?? ?? ???????? ??????? ?? ????? ????? ? ?? ?????????? ????????? ?? ???. ??????? ???????? ???? ?? ???? ?? ???? ????? ???????? ??????? ?? ?? ??? ?? ??? ????? ???? ?? ??????. ?? ?? ??? ?? ?????? ??? ???? ????? ???? ???? ?? ??? ???? ???? ????? ??? ???????? ???????? ????? ??? ? ??????? ???? ????? ????...
?? ????? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ???? ????? ?? ?? ??????? ??? ????? ???? ????? ??????? ?? ????? ????? ????? ???? ????? ?? ?? ??????? ?? ????? ???? ?? ?????? ??????? ??????? ??? ? ?????? ?? ?? ????? ?? ??? ?????? ?? ????? ? ?? ????? ???? ???? ????? ??? ?? ?????? ???? ????? ????. ??? ??? ???? ???????? ? ?????? ?? ?? ??? ? ????????? ???? ?? ?? ????? ??????... ?? ?? ?? ?? ??? ????? ?????? ? ??? ?? ???? ?????? ??? ?????? ????? ?? ???????? ???? ???? ????? ?????.
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Profile Image for James Scholz.
116 reviews3,951 followers
December 1, 2023
3.5

interesting read! informative, not always practical. chill book
Profile Image for Ph¨¨dre Banshee.
99 reviews25 followers
August 14, 2020
"Forse d'ora in poi scender¨° dentro di me e cercher¨° pi¨´ a fondo, pi¨´ lontano. In un terreno vasto e sconosciuto che probabilmente costituir¨¤ l'ultima frontiera. Se riuscir¨° o meno ad aprirla, quella frontiera, non lo so. Tuttavia, scusate se mi ripeto, stabilire chiaramente il proprio obiettivo ¨¨ una cosa fantastica. A qualunque et¨¤, in qualunque luogo."

¡°Come ho detto, quando si cerca di entrare in un campo che non ¨¨ il proprio, qualunque esso sia, non si ¨¨ visti di buon occhio dalle persone che vi appartengono, e che tendono a impedirne l¡¯accesso, come i globuli bianchi cercano di eliminare dal corpo i microorganismi estranei.¡±


¡°Questa ¨¨ solo la mia opinione personale, ma scrivere un romanzo ¨¨ un processo lento e poco appariscente. Non vi si pu¨° trovare il minimo ?glamour?. Te ne stai chiuso in una stanza ad arrovellarti su ogni frase ? forse ¨¨ meglio cos¨ª, anzi no, forse ¨¨ meglio in quest¡¯altro modo ?, a porti domande seduto alla scrivania, e dopo aver passato un¡¯intera giornata a perfezionare una riga, non c¡¯¨¨ nessuno che sia l¨ª ad applaudire. Nessuno che venga a darti una pacca sulla schiena dicendoti: ?Bravo, bel lavoro!? Nessuno che noti il livello letterario di quella riga. Tutto quello che puoi fare ¨¨ convincerti da solo di essere riuscito nel tuo intento, annuendo in silenzio. Questo significa scrivere. Un lavoro gramo che richiede tempo e fatica.¡±
¡°Scrivere un romanzo, anche un romanzo bellissimo, non ¨¨ tanto difficile. Non si pu¨° dire che sia una passeggiata, ma non ¨¨ impossibile. Per continuare a lungo per¨°, come ho appena detto, ¨¨ necessario avere qualcosa di particolare. Qualcosa che non ha relazione con il ?talento?. Ma come si fa a capire se lo si possiede o no? La risposta ¨¨ una sola: per sapere se una cosa gallegger¨¤ o affonder¨¤, bisogna gettarla in acqua. ? una metafora, ma pare che la vita funzioni davvero cos¨ª. A parte il fatto che si pu¨° vivere felici e contenti ? anzi, direi che si vive meglio ?, senza scrivere romanzi. Eppure ci sono persone che vogliono, che hanno bisogno di scrivere. E continuano a farlo. A quelle persone naturalmente, in quanto scrittore, do un sincero benvenuto. Prego, sul ring c¡¯¨¨ posto.¡±

¡°A un certo punto per¨° mi sono reso conto che mi stavo avvicinando ai trent¡¯anni. Per me stava per terminare quel periodo della vita in cui si ¨¨ ?ragazzi?. Ricordo che questo mi causava sentimenti complessi. Del genere: ?Ah, la vita dunque passa cos¨ª, in un attimo??¡±

¡°Ma chi non possiede quel tanto di arroganza non pu¨° diventare romanziere, lo penso davvero.¡±


¡°Sopravvivere e possibilmente avanzare, questo ¨¨ il compito che mi ¨¨ stato assegnato.¡±
¡°In ogni caso, da giovani bisogna leggere quanto pi¨² si pu¨°. Autori eccelsi, autori cos¨ª cos¨ª, autori insignificanti¡­ non ha (alcuna) importanza, l¡¯essenziale ¨¨ leggere in continuazione. Far passare dentro di s¨¦ il maggior numero possibile di storie. Frasi scritte in modo meraviglioso, ma a volte anche mediocre. ? un lavoro importante. Un compito da svolgere finch¨¦ si ha tempo a disposizione. Serve a dare al futuro romanziere un vigore di base indispensabile, a fortificare gli occhi. Anche scrivere ¨¨ importante, s¨ª, ma nell¡¯ordine di precedenza viene dopo, quindi non c¡¯¨¨ fretta.¡±

¡°Seconda cosa ? prima di iniziare a scrivere ?, mi pare che sia necessario prendere l¡¯abitudine di osservare in dettaglio le cose e i fenomeni che si hanno davanti. Osservare attentamente, con scrupolo, tutto quello che succede, gli eventi, le persone. E rifletterci su. Rifletterci, non dare giudizi di valore. ? preferibile non cercare subito soluzioni, rimandarle a pi¨² tardi. Quello che conta non ¨¨ trovare una risposta chiara, ma fissare le cose nella mente nel modo pi¨² fedele possibile, e da l¨ª trasformarle in materiale.¡±

¡°In ogni caso, qualunque sia il motivo che gliene offre l¡¯occasione, l¡¯autore, quando inizia a scrivere un romanzo, ¨¨ solo. Nessuno lo, o la, pu¨° aiutare. Al massimo, nel caso sia necessario fare qualche ricerca, pu¨° affidare a qualcun altro il compito di raccogliere dati e materiale, ma dovr¨¤ poi organizzarli nella sua testa personalmente, nessuno lo pu¨° fare per lui o per lei, nessuno pu¨° trovare le parole giuste. Quello che si ¨¨ iniziato da soli lo si deve portare avanti e completare da soli. Non si pu¨° fare come i giocatori di baseball, che di questi tempi, dopo aver lanciato sette volte, lasciano il posto a un altro e vanno ad asciugarsi il sudore in panchina. Per gli scrittori non ci sono panchine. Una volta iniziata la lunga sfida, devono continuare a lanciare la palla, fosse anche quindici, diciotto volte, fino al termine della partita.¡±

¡°Dire che ¨¨ un lavoro solitario parr¨¤ banale, ma ¨¨ proprio cos¨ª: scrivere un romanzo, soprattutto un romanzo lungo, ¨¨ qualcosa che si fa in solitudine. A volte ho l¡¯impressione di stare seduto in fondo a un pozzo. Nessuno ti viene ad aiutare, o a complimentarsi con te dicendoti: ?Bravo, oggi hai lavorato bene?, dandoti una pacca sulla spalla. L¡¯opera finita verr¨¤ forse elogiata (se tutto va bene), ma sulla fatica fatta per scriverla nessuno dir¨¤ mai una parola di apprezzamento. ? un fardello che lo scrittore si deve caricare senza fiatare.¡±

¡°Essere un romanziere significa raccontare una storia. E raccontare una storia significa, in altre parole, scendere di propria volont¨¤ al fondo della propria coscienza. Nella parte pi¨² buia del proprio spirito. Pi¨² il racconto ¨¨ importante, pi¨² lo scrittore deve scendere. Cos¨ª come per costruire un palazzo molto grande, ¨¨ necessario scavare delle fondamenta molto profonde. Pi¨² la storia ¨¨ intensa, pi¨² le tenebre sotterranee si fanno dense e pesanti. Lo scrittore deve trovare in quelle tenebre ci¨° di cui ha bisogno ? il nutrimento necessario al romanzo ? e riportarlo con le sue mani nella sfera pi¨² alta della coscienza. Poi trasformarlo in un testo che abbia una forma e un senso. A volte le tenebre sono piene di cose pericolose. La creatura che vive l¨ª sotto pu¨° prendere forme diverse per confonderci le idee. Non ci sono n¨¦ cartelli indicatori n¨¦ mappe. ? come essere in un labirinto. In una caverna sotterranea. Basta un attimo di distrazione per smarrire la strada, e non riuscire pi¨² a tornare in superficie. Nelle tenebre, l¡¯inconscio collettivo e quello individuale si confondono. Passato e presente si mescolano. Dobbiamo riportare indietro ci¨° che abbiamo trovato a scatola chiusa, ma in certi casi il risultato ¨¨ pericoloso. Per resistere alla forza di queste profonde tenebre, per far fronte quotidianamente a tanti pericoli, abbiamo bisogno di energia fisica. Non posso indicare con precisione quanta ne sia necessaria, ma in ogni caso ¨¨ molto meglio averne che non averne. Quella che ¨¨ indispensabile a ognuno di noi, a prescindere da ogni criterio generale.¡±

¡°Quando si frequenta la scuola, gli ammonimenti fioccano di continuo: ?Devi studiare con impegno. Se non si impara da giovani, poi, da adulti, lo si rimpiange?. Sar¨¤, ma io, una volta terminati gli studi, questo rimpianto non l¡¯ho provato nemmeno una volta. Al contrario, mi dispiace non essermi divertito di pi¨², quando ero ragazzo. Invece di sprecare il mio tempo a studiare certe idiozie. Pu¨° darsi per¨° che io sia un caso limite.¡±

¡°Come per scrivere romanzi ¨¨ necessario leggerne un gran numero, allo stesso modo, mi sento di poter dire, per descrivere degli esseri umani bisogna averne incontrati tanti.¡±

¡°Magari un giorno mi metter¨° nei panni di una ventenne con tendenze lesbiche. Un marito trentenne che ha perso il lavoro. Infiler¨° le scarpe che mi verranno date, adatter¨° i miei piedi alla loro misura e inizier¨° ad avanzare. Tutto qui. Non devo trovare scarpe adatte ai miei piedi, ma fare il contrario.¡±

¡°In ogni caso, ci sono ancora tante cose che devo imparare sui personaggi che creo. E altrettante che loro devono insegnare a me. Ho l¡¯intenzione di continuare, a perdifiato, a riempire le mie storie di personaggi strani, misteriosi, pittoreschi. Quando inizio un nuovo romanzo, mi chiedo sempre, pieno di aspettative: ?Questa volta quali persone incontrer¨°??¡±

¡°I miei lettori¡­ Intendiamoci, non ¨¨ come quando si avvia un¡¯attivit¨¤ commerciale, che si fanno ricerche di mercato e si analizzano le fasce di consumatori, poi si fissa concretamente un target. Quelli che mi vengono in mente sono lettori fittizi. Gente che non ha n¨¦ et¨¤, n¨¦ professione, n¨¦ sesso. Nella realt¨¤ ce l¡¯hanno, ¨¨ ovvio, ma sono fattori interscambiabili. ? anche possibile che non siano elementi necessari. L¡¯importante, quello che non deve essere interscambiabile, ¨¨ il legame tra me e queste persone. Non so dove e in che modo, ma ho la sensazione che in un luogo profondo, buio, le mie radici e le loro siano connesse. Trattandosi di un luogo troppo remoto, non ¨¨ possibile esplorarlo. Ma attraverso il sistema del racconto, riusciamo a percepire questo legame. Una sensazione vivida di nutrimento che va e viene.¡±

¡°Questo mi fa venire in mente che una volta un mio ex compagno di scuola mi ha chiamato e mi ha detto. ?Mio figlio che ¨¨ liceale ha letto tutti i tuoi libri, ne parliamo spesso insieme. Di solito noi non parliamo molto, ma dei tuoi romanzi discutiamo volentieri?. Dal tono sembrava davvero contento. Ah, allora i miei libri hanno anche una qualche utilit¨¤ sociale, ho pensato.¡±
Profile Image for Nat K.
491 reviews211 followers
January 23, 2024
¡±...our futures, it seems, don¡¯t always unfold in the ways we expect.¡±

When you think of a writer, the image which probably springs to mind is that of someone who suffers for their art. Someone pale from hours spent indoors pounding away at their keyboard to produce the required amount of blood, sweat and tears (i.e, a word count) to bring their creative vision to life.

While that may be the truth for many wordsmiths, Haruki Murakami puts a different slant on the life of a writer and the creative process. As he puts it, it¡¯²õ just plain hard yakka. To be treated like any other job. You have to put in the work. Some days are good, some less so. There¡¯²õ criticism involved (both constructive and not), and most of all, it¡¯²õ simply a leap of faith! If you have it in you to write a book, then that¡¯²õ what you have to do. There is no magic formula.

This is a short book of eleven essays where you can really hear his ¡°voice¡±. He talks (and ponders) about why books are so important, what his readers mean to him, and how vital it is to keep physically fit with such a sedentary vocation (which is why running suits him so well, as it¡¯²õ such a mind-body activity).

He talks about his love of books, and how as a teen he¡¯d get his hands on any genre of book written in English, learning the language purely so he could read them in their original language. He ponders on his school and uni years (he didn¡¯t dislike either) yet education made little difference to his life as he went on to open a jazz cafe (which was unheard of then), and the importance (or in his case disinterest) in literary prizes, and why they can¡¯t define what makes a good book.

He mentions writers who have influenced and had an impact on him such as Raymond Chandler (he translated several of his novels into Japanese) and the enormous talent that was Ernest Hemingway.

Raymond Carver gets a nod as a guardian angel of sorts who helps Murakami find a publisher in the US. It¡¯²õ interesting how these things work out. Kismet.

Music gets a huge mention as it plays such a big part in his works. He talks about the thrill of hearing the Beatles single Please Please Me on the radio as a fifteen year old (how cool is that) and the Beach Boys and jazz. Always jazz. John Coltrane doing his own thing and playing his own sound, which is an approach which Murakami used when writing his books. It has to be your style and your own voice, not what the rules or fads of ¡°literature¡± are at the time.

I loved how he talked about several generations in the one family reading his books, and something that really stood out to me is where he mentioned he¡¯²õ met several readers who have re-read his books, often across several decades.

¡±And some of my readers - a not inconsiderable number - go on to reread the book.In some cases, they read it many times over several decades.¡±

Putting my hand up here Mr. Murakami! That¡¯²õ me too, as I embark on reading (and re-reading) your novels. Having just finished The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle (which I first read wayyyyyyy back in 1997) it truly is fascinating how life gives you a different perspective, and how the same book can have a different meaning depending on when you read it.

Talking about his readers, he says he wants to:
¡±...open a window in their souls and let the fresh air in.¡±

There¡¯²õ no pretension here, nor big headedness for such a popular novelist. Just the calm, practical voice of someone who is comfortable in his own skin and happy to share his thoughts on his amazing journey.

This is a little gem of a book. Great for anyone wanting a refreshingly honest look at the world of writing, publishers and the creative process. Especially if you¡¯re a Murakami fan.
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