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       # 2025-09-04 - The Wind Up Bird Chronicle by Murakami Haruki
       
       A friend gave me a copy of this book and told me they liked the
       author.  It's a thick book, so i didn't read it right away.  This
       book has erotic, horror, and shamanic elements.  Above all else i
       would classify it as a psychological novel.
       
       I perceive Toru Okada's struggle with his sense of self worth.  He is
       obviously intelligent and capable, but he goes through a long period
       of abandonment and unemployment.  Over time he seems to grow a sense
       of his intrinsic value, as opposed to his utility value.
       
       Several different characters experienced a narrow miss with death.  I
       wouldn't call them full-blown NDE's.  Their responses had several
       things in common.  They became de-sensitized and no longer felt pain,
       a sense of purpose, etc.  This seemed like traumatic dissociation to
       me.  These characters became abnormal.  Toru Okada is a magnet for
       the abnormal.  His high tolerance and non-judgment make him unguarded
       and vulnerable to all kinds of nonsense.  But these abnormalities
       bear gifts that enable the characters to rise above normal
       circumstances and achieve the unexplainable.
       
       This book talks about facts that are not true, and truths that are
       not facts.  It talks about different kinds of time.  It routinely
       bridges reality, dream sequences, shamanic visions, and extreme
       circumstances that forcibly remove people from their everyday
       existence, sometimes giving a tantalizing hint of satori.
       
       I detected many tropes from Japanese anime.  Perhaps it would be more
       accurate to say that the tropes originate in Japanese mythology.  For
       example, Toru Okada is cursed with a dark mark that gives him new
       powers, but also exacts a personal cost.  This is similar to what
       happens to Ashitaka in Princess Mononoke.  This book, like many anime
       series, has a rushed ending where many of the loose threads are tied
       up into a neat and tidy resolution.  It ends on a hopeful yet
       melancholy note.
       
       From a GoodReads review:
       
       > While there is a heavy reliance on tropes we are all familiar
       > with--the unremarkable hero, the good/bad woman, the use of magic
       > and the surreal--these all become surprisingly fresh in Murakami's
       > hands.
       
       What follows excerpts from the book that i found interesting.
       
       ## Book 1, Chapter 4
       
       This was very different from the image of home I had imagined vaguely
       for myself before marriage.  But this was /the home I had chosen./
       I had a home, of course, when I was a child.  But it was not one I
       had chosen for myself.  I had been born into it, presented with it as
       an established fact.  Now, however, I lived in a world that I had
       chosen through an act of will.  It was my home.  It might not be
       perfect, but the fundamental stance I adopted to my home was to
       accept it, problems and all, because it was something I myself had
       chosen.  If it had problems, these were almost certainly problems
       that had originated within me.
       
       [commitment]
       
       ## Book 1, Chapter 6
       
       I rarely suffer lengthy emotional distress from contact with other
       people.  A person may anger or annoy me, but not for long.  I can
       distinguish between myself and another as beings of two different
       realms.  It's a kind of talent (by which I do not mean to boast: it's
       not an easy thing to do, so if you can do it, it is a kind of
       talent--a special power).  When someone gets on my nerves, the first
       thing I do is transfer the object of my unpleasant feelings to
       another domain, one having no connection with me.  Then I tell
       myself, Fine, I'm feeling bad, but I've put the source of these
       feelings into another zone, away from here, where I can examine it
       and deal with it later in my own time.  In other words, I put a
       freeze on my emotions.  Later, when I thaw them out to perform the
       examination, I do occasionally find my emotions still in a distressed
       state, but that is rare.  The passage of time will usually extract
       the venom from most things and render them harmless.  Then, sooner or
       later, I forget about them.
       
       In the course of my life so far, I've been able to keep my world in a
       relatively stable state by avoiding most useless troubles through
       activation of this emotional management system.  That I have
       succeeded in maintaining such an effective system all this time is a
       matter of some pride to me.
       
       [personal responsibility]
       
       When it came to Noboru Wataya, though, my system refused to function.
       I was unable simply to shove Noboru Wataya into a domain having no
       connection with me.  And that fact itself annoyed the hell out of me.
       Kumiko's father was an arrogant, unpleasant man, to be sure, but
       finally he was a small-minded character who lived by clinging to a
       simple set of narrow beliefs.  I could forget about someone like
       that.  But not Noboru Wataya.  He knew what kind of a man he was.
       And he had a pretty good idea of what made me tick as well.  If he
       had felt like it, he could have crushed me until there was nothing
       left.  The only reason he hadn't was that he didn't give a damn about
       me.  I wasn't worth the time and energy it would have taken to crush
       me.  And that's what got me about him.  He was a despicable human
       being, an egoist with nothing inside him.  But he was a far more
       capable individual than I was.
       
       ## Book 3, Chapter 1
       
       Between the end of that strange summer and the approach of winter, my
       life went on without change. Each day would dawn without incident and
       end as it had begun. It rained a lot in September. October had
       several warm, sweaty days. Aside from the weather, there was hardly
       anything to distinguish one day from the next. I worked at
       concentrating my attention on the real and useful.  I would go to the
       pool almost every day for a long swim, take walks, make myself three
       meals.
       
       [plateau: internal development during external stasis]
       
       But even so, every now and then I would feel a violent stab of
       loneliness. ... I could hear the roots of loneliness creeping through
       me when the world was hushed at four o'clock in the morning.
       
       ## Book 3, Chapter 20
       
       "Designing clothes was my secret little door to a different world,"
       said Nutmeg, "a world that belonged only to me.  In that world,
       imagination was everything.  The better you were able to imagine what
       you wanted to imagine, the farther you could flee from reality.  And
       what I really liked about it was that it was free.  It didn't cost a
       thing.  It was wonderful!  Imagining beautiful clothes in my mind and
       transferring the images to paper was not just a way for me to leave
       reality behind and steep myself in dreams, though.  I needed it to go
       on living.  It was natural and obvious to me as breathing.  So I
       assumed that everyone else was doing it too.  When I realized that
       everyone else was /not/ doing it--that they couldn't do it even if
       they tried--I told myself, `I'm different from other people, so the
       life I live will have to be different from theirs.'"
       
       [individuality, each person having their own unique calling,
       talents, and relationship with life, the universe, and everything.]
       
       author: Murakami, Haruki, 1949-
  TEXT detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/The_Wind-Up_Bird_Chronicle
       LOC:    PL856.U673 N4513
       tags:   book,fantasy,fiction
       title:  The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
       
       # Tags
       
   DIR book
   DIR fantasy
   DIR fiction