Whenever I read something in translation, I wonder how much of what I'm enjoying is actually the work of the translator. The more I learn about Murakami, the more I know that he is the guy responsible for what I'm reading. Sorry snobs, he rocks.
<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 6/26/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">Ghetta Life</b> <<a href="mailto:ghetta_outta@hotmail.com">ghetta_outta@hotmail.com</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
<a href="http://www.theage.com.au/news/books/the-lone-wolf/2006/06/21/1150845234882.html">http://www.theage.com.au/news/books/the-lone-wolf/2006/06/21/1150845234882.html</a><br><br>Yet Murakami has always distanced himself from the Japanese tradition of the
<br>writer as social admonisher: "I thought of myself as just a fiction writer."<br><br>Murakami's resistance to literary cliques has led him to be seen as thumbing<br>his nose at Japan and its literature. He refuses to fulfil the typical
<br>public duties of writers - participating in talk shows, judging panels and<br>literary festivals - and declines all requests for television and telephone<br>interviews.<br><br>As dreamy and introverted as his disaffected protagonists, Murakami has no
<br>literary friends and never attends parties. He has spent large stretches of<br>his adult life in Europe and America; we meet, in Murakami's unassuming<br>Ayoama office, during his brief return to Tokyo from Harvard, where he holds
<br>a writer's fellowship. "I have no models in Japanese literature. I created<br>my own style, my own way. They don't appreciate this."<br><br>As a teenager, Murakami kicked against the reading tastes of his parents -
<br>both lecturers in Japanese literature - by consuming pulpy American mystery<br>novels in English. He read "to get away from Japanese society". Murakami's<br>idols remain American writers - Fitzgerald, Carver, Chandler and Vonnegut.
<br><br>His offhand prose, studded with references to American low culture,<br>contrasts with the formal elegance of Japan's literary lodestars - Yukio<br>Mishima, Kenzaburo Oe and Junichiro Tanizaki. The heroes of his<br>
surrealistic, genre-bending novels are more likely to eat spaghetti, listen<br>to Radiohead and read Len Deighton than drink sake or quote Oe. They are<br>under-employed drifters, without children or long-term partners, who refuse
<br>to genuflect to the Japanese group ethos of the family and the corporation.<br><br>_________________________________________________________________<br>Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today it's FREE!
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