LITERATURE: The Shadow of the Wind – Plot

Interesting base for the storyline: A young boy selects a special book from his father’s cache by a little known author and it turns out to be also a favorite author of a beautiful young blind woman with whom the boy forms a close relationship.  The boy is emotionally taken with the woman and reads to her daily for several years until the woman, seeing the potential problems as the boy reaches his mid-teens, ends the relationship.  But the book, The Shadow of the Wind is the prize and the mystery of the story as a mysterious faceless man is determined to possess the book.

Good story, easy reading, enough conflict and promise of more.  The writing is not experimental but rather a bit dated it would seem, the narrative following traditional form with all the elements of fictional storytelling closely followed.  Not that this is a bad thing; it is different in its own way–after reading Burgess, O’Brien, and McCarthy just prior.

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REALITY?:

I would think there can be no better news today than this: baby Justin, five days old, is holding his own against the world.

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WRITING: Prolificality

Been thinking about so-called writer’s block lately.  Wondering if the submission process is truly the problem and I just don’t think it’s that at all.

There is a lack of confidence, of course.  "Of course" because there are a few areas where I’m feeling deficient and they, as seems to always be the case, converge to paralyze the creative part of me–or anyone I would think who is by nature obsessive.

Overwhelmed by thoughts that take over daily doings, prevent any hope of restful nights, I struggle to produce a day that goes beyond what’s for dinner.  Strange, how one can be intelligent enough to recognize a pattern and yet do little to break it.

The backyard calls me.  I will, if nothing else, hoe up the garden, trim some bushes, try to bury problems in the soft brown earth and raise the spirit from the planting of hopeful seeds.

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LITERATURE: The Shadow of the Wind – A nice beginning

Nice writing style.  Zafon brings us a lot of information while intriguing the reader with his opening of a (first person narrator) young boy whose mother has died and whose father owns a used bookstore and offers the boy consolation and discovery in The Cemetary of Lost Books.

Nice thoughts:

A secret’s worth depends on the people from whom it must be kept. (p. 9)

Every book, every volume you see here, has a soul.  The soul of the person who wrote it and of those who read it and lived and dreamed with it. (p. 3)

Nice language use:

…as the city awoke, like a watercolor slowly coming to life. (p. 2)

The man’s oratory could kill flies in midair. (p. 12)

Even so early into this book I can see the writing skill, polished to perfection.  Zafon handles story line, detail, a tad bit of mystery with a nice flair for colloquial yet handsome phrases that make me feel like I’m drinking in the tale.

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LITERATURE: Next up- The Shadow of the Wind

050707lThis novel by Carlos Ruiz Zafon has been highly recommended by a friend of mine who declared it one of her favorites.

Oddly enough, the back cover includes this:  “Hidden in the heart of the old city of Barcelona is the ‘Cemetary of Forgotten Books’, a labyrinthine library of obscure and fogotten titles.”

After Kafka, where the library and labyrinths played such an important part.

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LITERATURE: Kafka on the Shore – Finale

My general gut feeling remains the same on this.  I feel that the story is wonderful, but would have liked to see better handling of that story. 

Now I’m sure that Murakami fans think I’m off the wall on this, but I just feel a bit disappointed by the ending that was presented almost as the end of a fantasy fic novel, leaving some of the more intriguing questions raised either answered by a preachy-form of character (Oshima) opinion:

"Every one of us is losing something precious to us," he says after the phone stops ringing.  "Lost opportunities, lost possibilities, feelings we can never get back again.  That’s part of what it means o be alive.  But inside our heads–at least that’s where I imagine it–there’s a little room where we store those memories."  (p. 463)

Sort of anticlimactic, I thought.  And this wisdom is from a twenty-one year-old who admittedly is quite together despite some complex gender association.  But it’s nothing particularly deep, and the boy Kafka has been through so much and yet merely makes up his mind to go back home and finish school.

But there was enough here for me to explore Murakami’s work further and I will indeed soon order The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle to see what else Murakami has to offer.

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LITERATURE: Kafka on the Shore – Pre-Finale

Just finished this and my first comment would be that I’m surprised it didn’t take me long to read through 465 pages.

My second comment might be that my immediate response is a bit of a letdown.  It seems that the weirdness continues, but in a way that reminds me more of horror stories or fantasy fiction rather than a more metaphorical discovery.  This, despite the repeated statements by Oshima that "the world is a metaphor."  Maybe I’ve just come to rely too much on Murakami to tell me what was going on, since it was pretty well hidden and he seemed to have all the answers ready to give.

And yet, I don’t feel the novel is complete.  There’s a happy ending which frankly, I wouldn’t have expected and so maybe that’s where the twist comes in.  The writing was good–obviously, if I read it so quickly–yet for the first 200 pages the story was rather normal, then it got me all excited when Murakami went weird on me, and then I just read along. seemingly watching for the telltale signs of clues as the two characters’ lives began to touch.

As far as the main characters, while I fell in love with the old man, Nakata, the boy Kafka was basically your rich kid who runs away to escape a dysfuntional family and perhaps seek his mother and sister.  Unfortunately, I wasn’t impressed with the kid–oh, he’s very nice and all that–because everything just plopped right in his lap.  I doubt that he had to touch the three grand he stole from his father to buy anything for himself.  There was always somebody ready and willing to help him.  These became the heroes for me.

I have to think some more on the whole labyrinth, netherworld idea, and the possibility that in dreams there is a way of having out of body experiences that Murakami seems to want us to consider as a possiblity.  There’s just too much neatly tied up as the threads unravel, and yet no real answer that I felt appear as an impetus to delve deeper.

More later.

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LITERATURE: Kafka on the Shore – Plot

As I’m coming towards the end of this story (should be finished tomorrow) little things are starting to bother me.  What’s the good of surrealism if it seems contrived?

As the characters progress on their journeys–which by the way, they seem to take for granted–too much is tied in to try to make it appear to make sense.  For me, the magic of magical realism is that it needn’t make any sense at all.

There’s also an overload of philosophical discussion about life, how to behave within it, how dreams and reality are intertwined, how we are part of the whole and the whole is a part of us, but not left simply to metaphor.  One or the other of the characters has to present it as a piece of advice to another character, or we’re inside somebody’s head as he ponders it to himself.

Murakami throws out some great theories, and then proceeds to expound upon them.  I feel it is presented more in lecture form than a question offered up to the reader.

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REALITY?: Ups and Downs

Indigo bunting at the feeder brings an excited Come here, Gibb, and see this!

Dear friends fly in to welcome a brand new grandson.  Within hours the little one is fighting for his life.

We wait.  It’s all we can do.

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LITERATURE: Kafka on the Shore – Detail

Nor do we need to know every meal the characters eat.

Back in the apartment, a soothing fragance filled the place.  Nakata was bustling around the kitchen preparing some steamed daikon and deep-fried flat tofu. (p. 356)

At six Nakata made dinner–grilled salmon and a salad, plus a number of little side dishes he’d concocted. (p. 358)

They breakfasted on rise, miso soup with eggplant, dried mackerel, and pickles. Hoshino had a second helping of rice.  (p. 359)

At noon they stopped by a diner and had curry. (p. 361)

At three they went into a coffee shop, where Hoshino had a cup of coffee.  Nakata puzzled over his order, finally going with the iced milk. (p. 362)

At noon they stopped by a restaurant specializing in eel and ordered the lunch special, a bowl of rice topped with eel.  At three they went to a coffee shop, where Hoshino had coffee, Nakata kelp tea. (p. 364)

Notice the page numbers. Now Nakata and Hoshino are on a mission and they’re driving around for a couple days in search of something, but Murakami even throws in when these guys go to the bathroom.  Oddly enough, that’s always been one of the things folks began to notice in novels and tv shows and movies:  Nobody goes to the bathroom.

Me, I’ve always been bugged by the family sitting down to dinner and crowding around only one side of the table so that no one’s back is to the camera.

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REALITY?: Spring Urges

To feel the warm earth in my fingers, to smell it.  To push the muscles past the point of pain in preparation of a garden.  To gauge the blossoms on the branches and trim the laggers.  To sit with paper and a pencil drawing out the lines of rows and printing names of vegetables and herbs and yes, the dahlias and other pick-for-huge-bouquet flowers to cheer the rooms.

The heart is tugged in one direction, the mind in just the opposite other.  The coolness feels like fall.

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LITERATURE: Kafka on the Shore – Style

I’m a firm believer in knowing the rules inside-out before you attempt to break them.  I’m also a believer that most of the best literary classics are based on broken rules.

But I’m having a bit of a hard time accepting Murakami’s highly detailed descriptions of the mundane, whereas I would have taken an editorial red pencil to a lot of extraneous writing:

He’s wearing a pair of Armani-type sunglasses, and a striped linen shirt over a white V-neck T-shirt, white jeans, and navy blue, low-cut Converse All-Stars.  Casual day-off clothes. (p. 331)

Now I don’t have a problem with the way these words are strung together, nor with Kafka’s describing what Oshima is wearing this day.  The problem is that we get a similar rundown on both Oshima’s togs and Miss Saeki’s every day. 

This book is 461 pages long.  Between the explanations Murakami gives through the characters for what’s going on, the descriptions such as above (even to the point of washing out underwear), there’s a  lot that could have been more concisely edited I would think.

On Murakami’s purpose, I might think that the mundane routine might be a sense of grounding that more easily contrasts with the surreal he introduces into the stories and thus provides more impact.  He also, I would add, provides easy sentence structure and phraseology that is quick-paced and enjoyable enough though not particularly linguistically outstanding or poetic. 

I wonder too if the fact that this is of course a translation has much to do with it.  I know no Japanese so I do not know how it translates–with ease or with difficulty–into English.  When you’re reading for writing style, I’m finding that you cannot be as opinionated with your consideration of the author’s style when you’re reading it in a language other than its original written version.

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LITERATURE: Kafka on the Shore – Duality

Maybe I’m just slow at catching drifts, or maybe I’m just the caboose on a train going on the wrong track, but I’m being pounded with a sense of duality in this novel.

Obviously, the two stories, the two characters, the half shadows, the double natures of lives and time, the each of us half seeking our other half, Oshima’s complex gender, Miss Saeki’s youth and middle-age, dreams and wakefulness, all that; this is a novel about the two sides of everything.  But what tipped me off to the importance of this is the repeated description of Nakata’s salt and pepper hair.

Now Nakata is wondering about himself, and what sort of Nakata he would have been had the occurrence on that hill as a young student on a field trip not changed him.

Paths, discussing metaphor, seeking something unknown, feeling a need to move towards something while leaving behind something or even running from it; there’s something to all this and I’m seeing it as the larger riddle of ourselves as we attempt to separate our minds from our bodies to understand the difference between the two that are still inextricably one.

Like I said; maybe I’m just taking one of those trips to no answerland that I tend to enjoy.

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LITERATURE: Kafka on the Shore – Philosophy

All right, so everything’s not as it appears to be, or maybe it is and suspension of disbelief is all it takes to appreciate this novel.  But Kentucky Fried Pimp?

Now I’ve never had a problem with believing what I read; that is, taking as the truth the story and events as the author has presented them.  With Paz’s My Life With the Wave, I never doubted that the man brought home a loving wash of seawater.  What bothers me in fiction (and of course, supposed non-fiction) is the little details that don’t ring true.  But that’s the way I am in life as well; I handle crisis with a calm and effective way.  The little things that pester like mosquitos will turn me manic in a matter of time.

So okay, it’s Colonel Sanders.  And from him we get some learning:

"You still don’t get it, do you?  We’re talking about a revelation here," Colonel Sanders said, clicking his tongue.  "A revelation leaps over the borders of the everyday.  A life without revelation is no life at all.  What you need to do is move from reason that observes to reason that acts.  That’s what’s critical.  Do you have any idea what I’m talking about, you gold-plated whale of a dunce?"  (p. 275)

Up until now, Kafka’s new friend at the library, Oshima, has been the wise and thoughtful one, giving the youth as well as the reader some thoughts to ponder.  But these tidbits are maybe just favorites of Murakami, his thoughts on life that he infuses his writings with to get them out and into other people’s heads.  It’s not a preachy thing, and yet it’s given placement that, coming from characters like Johnnie Walker and Colonel Sanders, one seems to want to give some import.

   

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WRITING & REALITY?: Defining Moments

Interesting notion, the defining moment, that flicker of time that changes everything in life and in a fictional story just as well.

I’m working in the frameshop and the fire siren goes off just a mile or so from me uptown.  Its continued wailing and a quick glance at my watch tell me it’s not the noon whistle.  There is a fire, or an accident somewhere happening within the borders of my town. And someone’s life has changed.

It reminds me of another Saturday a few years back, coming out of the shower to answer an unrelenting ringing of the phone.  Being told I’m needed to do CPR. Racing next door to try to help a neighbor.  And as I cross the lawns I’m very much aware of the siren wailing out its announcement of a change.

There’s only so much planning you can put into writing; sometimes the alarm goes off all by itself.

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