Ratings59
Average rating3.4
Absolutely terrible and a total waste of time. It's a collection of short stories with the central motif being an earthquake which plays absolutely no role at all with any subsequent plot developments. After introducing a couple of plot points, none of them are resolved at all. I was askance about the book half way through and despite that completed it. Highly pretentious, egregious and a chore to go through.
Plus the sex scenes are plain groan worthy.
“Strange and mysterious things, though, aren't they- earthquakes? We take it for granted that the earth beneath our feet is solid and stationary. We even talk about people being ‘down to earth' or having their feet firmly planted on the ground. But suddenly one day we see it isn't true. The earth, the boulders, that are suppose to be so solid, all of a sudden turn as mushy as liquid.”
Really enjoyed this collection of short stories all linked to the Kobe earthquake, and the last one, Honey Pie, was just wonderful.
“Whatever distinguishes one lump of flesh from another when we're alive, we're all the same once we're dead, just used-up shells.”
You know it's Murakami, when the characters stay with you long after you've finished reading the book.
After the Quake is a collection of short stories, about lives of some people and how differently they were all affected by one incident - The Earthquake at Kobe.
My personal favorite was Super-Frog Saves Tokyo, starts all dreamy and vivid, but ends on a very disturbingly horrid note.
Murakami isn't like any author I've read. He has a way of storytelling, which forces you to think about the characters and their lives, even after the story has ended.
After having this book on my wishlist for years, where do I finally find a copy? A library is moving to a smaller facility and is forced to purge its shelves of many extraneous books. A near perfect copy except for gigantic Magic Marker slashes through library information and a big W/D on the inside cover. Murakami takes his usual route through the world of the unusual, but the route always seems purposeful though precarious and strange.
A short and great read. Overall it's good but man one of them was so bad. Hated all of children can dance.
It could have been better, but he had to include weird sexualisation of the mother character.
Like I know some people can think like sexually about their mother, but did he had to write it down?
It was really uncomfortable to read the story and hard to relate to the author.
The trope of adult Japanese women being oblivious to sex and thier sex appeal/attraction is honestly tiring.
Who acts like a kid as an adult and what's with Japanese media liking this. I really don't get them.
Without that the story was alright as the parts about it were good.
And from the rest really loved honey pie. From the rest, super frog saves Tokyo was fun and landscape with flatiron was memorable.