Sunday, February 23, 2025

1Q84 by Haruki Murakami

 

This lengthy novel (over 1100 pages) is, at its core, a love story.  Aomame and Tengo attended the same school twenty years ago.  They shared a moment as children that neither has ever forgotten.   Soon afterwards, Aomame moved away and they lost each other.  She is now a physical fitness instructor and therapist.  Tengo teaches math at a cram school which gives him the needed time to do what he wants which is to become a novelist.  

But this is not a straightforward love story.  Each, by different means, falls into another world, a world which is similar but tellingly different.  It has two moons, just like the best selling novel that Tengo ghostwrote in collaboration with an autistic teenager raised in a religious cult.  They both realize that their lives will only be complete when they find each other again and search for each other.

There are many other elements in this novel.  There is the religious cult.  Tengo has a father who is entering the end of his life.  There is a wealthy woman who spends her fortune rescuing victims of domestic violence and her employee, Tamaru, who makes sure she is safe.  There are the Little People who speak to the religious cult.  Women become pregnant without having sex.  There is a former lawyer who is now a private investigator who searches for Aomame.  

All of these different characters and storylines are resolved by the end of the novel.  The book is part mystery, part romance, part fantasy.  I've read several other Murakami books and this one was the one that was most approachable.  It flowed even with all the strange events that happened.  Haruki Murakami is a Japanese writer with over thirty books, which have been translated into over fifty languages.  His work is full of magic realism but always has a realistic message underneath.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

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