Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle

The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
The WindUp Bird Chronicle
Author: Haruki Murakami
Japan's most highly regarded novelist now vaults into the first ranks of international fiction writers with this heroically imaginative novel, which is at once a detective story, an account of a disintegrating marriage, and an excavation of the buried secrets of World War II. — In a Tokyo suburb a young man named Toru Okada searches for his wife'...  more »
The Market's bargain prices are even better for Paperbackswap club members!
Retail Price: $16.95
Buy New (Paperback): $13.29 (save 21%) or
Become a PBS member and pay $9.39+1 PBS book credit Help icon(save 44%)
ISBN-13: 9780679775430
ISBN-10: 0679775439
Publication Date: 9/1/1998
Pages: 624
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 179

4 stars, based on 179 ratings
Publisher: Vintage
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 3
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

bookaddict avatar reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on
Helpful Score: 6
This book generated quite a stir in the literary community--I think largely bcs no one understood what was going on in it! Is this like Firebird (Igor Stravinsky's avant-garde, misunderstood, seemingly chaotic piece that caused a riot when it was performed for the first time?) or Finnegan's Wake (James Joyce's seemingly nonsensical tome which is so complicated that *shelves* of lit crit have been produced trying to explain it)? Or is it just a wreck? I don't know. I couldn't make head or tail of it myself. But if you don't expect tidiness (neat endings to plotlines, for example, or explanations of any kind), there is a lot of very interesting stuff in this book.

Me, I think Murakami wrote it while he was feverish, and then never went back and revised.
:)
reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Muakami has become virtually a genre unto himself - hallucinatory prose where even mundane events (a lost cat, a telephone conversation) seem to carry within them the seed of a disturbing nightmare even when delivered with humor. The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle is one of his best. A masterpiece.
chickpea avatar reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on + 20 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Loved this book...read it straight through on a flight from Tokyo to the US. Fascinating, albeit metaphysical story, on the intertwining of generations, history and the present. Highly recommend.
jrw avatar reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on + 33 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Chronicle is written in a very Japanese way. The plot gets fragmented easily and becomes obscure, both lending to an ethereal quality. Many threads begin, intertwine, and unravel during the book so if one is not paying attention and connecting seemingly disparate parts, the story can readily confuse a reader.
There are parts of the book that are graphic, especially parts detailing torture during the war. I would say that the style is similar to other Japanese media such as Anime or even video games, so if you enjoy those, you'll probably enjoy The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle.
reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on + 67 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A quirky book with mystery, metaphysics, history and sex. About a struggling marriage in modern Japan with fascinating stories about the Manchurian war between Russia and Japan with its horrific aftermath. Finding the connection between these story lines made for an interesting book group discussion.
Read All 15 Book Reviews of "The WindUp Bird Chronicle"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on + 412 more book reviews
To say that this is an odd novel is a major understatement. I felt like I was reading someone's dream. I was hoping for a tying up of events, characters by the end of the novel but it did not happen. Dreams don't tie up loose ends either. Maybe that was the point...
reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on + 3 more book reviews
This book can best be described as the title itself suggests, as a chronicle. I really enjoyed the leaps from ordinary mundane life, into the surreal dream/nightmare life that the main character, Mr. Okada, finds himself. And then there are the first hand accounts of historical narrative from pre and post WWII! I know I am not nearly clever enough to delve deeply into the book to see how all the imagery connects, the well, and water and love, death, and sex all have in common, but it was sure fun getting to try. what I think Murakami does best though, is paint a scene so that you are there... feeling the heat, hearing the cicadas (or the wind- up bird) or tasting what Okada is having for lunch. I am glad I read this chronicle.. it is unlike anything else I have ever read.
althea avatar reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on + 774 more book reviews
Although marketed as literary fiction Id definitely categorize this as fantastic realism. Murakami is definitely influenced by Kafka, but has a very Japanese perspective and a distinctive style all his own.
As the novel opens we are introduced to Toru Okada and his wife Kumiko a seemingly average young married couple. Mr. Okada has recently quit his job at a legal firm to try to decide what he really wants to do with his life but Kumiko has a good job, so overall, their biggest worry seems to be that their cat has gone missing. Okada isnt doing much he looks for the cat, does domestic chores, becomes acquainted with a teenage neighbor, May Kasahara, who is recovering from a motorcycle accident. His wifes unpleasant brother, Noboru Wataya, puts him, indirectly, in touch with a weird couple of sister psychics with the unlikely names of Malta and Creta Kano, ostensibly to help find the cat. It seems strange, but the Wataya family is known to consult psychics, as a matter of fact, they had encouraged the couple to see one before, the elderly WWII vet Mr. Honda, who always told more war stories than he made prophecies
But then, Kumiko goes missing. The evidence seems to indicate that she left her husband for another man but this just doesnt ring true to Okada. His brother-in-law, Noboru Wataya, now a rising star in politics, seems to take on a much more sinister aspect, as allegations against him surface. Dark family secrets are hinted at Okada is definitely a go-with-the-flow kind of guy, but he cant help feeling that Kumiko is being kept from him, that she has not chosen to leave him. Following vague and subject-to-interpretation statements from psychic advice, he sits down in a well on a neighboring property that is rumored to be haunted or at least ill-omened to think. The well seems to gain a sort of compelling force over him. A weird mark appears on his face, which in turn attracts another weird psychic team the obsessively fashionable Nutmeg, and her mute son Cinnamon, who recruit Okada into their lucrative business. But still the well calls him back Okada seems to believe that he is getting close to something self-revelation? A way to discover the truth? A way to get Kumiko back?
The book meshes realistic depiction of modern Japan, surreal psychic phenomena, astral travel, and tales of WWII and its aftermath its heavily symbolic, and effectively evocative in its creation of atmosphere Ill be looking out for more of Murakamis books.
reviewed The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle on
Not what I expected. It was an unusual story with a rather slow pace. Not really something I would recommend to others.

Book Wiki

Real Places

Genres: