HARUKI MURAKAMI was born in Kyoto in 1949 and now lives near Tokyo. His work has been translated into more than fifty languages, and the most recent of his many international honors is the Jerusalem Prize, whose previous recipients include J. M. Coetzee, Milan Kundera, and V. S. Naipaul.
“As if the work of Japanese fiction master Haruki Murakami weren't
strangely beautiful by itself, his American publisher has just put
out a stand-alone edition of his 2008 novella The Strange
Library, in a new trade paperback designed by the legendary
Chip Kidd. . . . The story itself, full of characters and images
both awfully weird and utterly down to earth, transforms as you
read it, becoming a living, nearly talismanic exercise in how to
lift yourself out of the realm of the ordinary and allow the
sentences to carry you into an alternate universe. . . . The
mysterious pleasure of it all is the payoff when you read Murakami.
Some scholar may explain it to us all one day, diagram the roots of
his work in the Japanese storytelling tradition, in fable and myth,
the special effects he imports from American literature. For me,
now, I'm just enjoying basking in the heat of this hypnotic short
work by a master who is playing a long game.” —Alan Cheuse, NPR
“[A] charming, surreal story. . . . Cleverly designed and
illustrated by Chip Kidd. . . . Whether he is writing for adults or
children, [Murakami] remains a suspenseful and fantastical
storyteller.” —The Washington Post
“It had me enthralled . . . a story of childhood, death and
reading, drawn in both words and pictures, like a fairytale, yet
there was nothing childish about it. . . . Let the Murakami-mania
begin (again).” —Arifa Akbar, The
Independent (London)
“Murakami’s wry metaphysical play feels no less diffuse in this
concentrated form. His usual fascinations—the instability of
identity, the uses of knowledge, the oppression of memory—fade in
with just enough time to fade out, offering just enough light to
coax you forward, deeper into the dream.” —The Boston Globe
“Welcome . . . once again, to Murakamiland: sheep men, waifs,
quests, attentiveness to little (odd) things, a labyrinth, a
stairway down . . . absurdity and irrationality, the tension
between the fantastical and the everyday, real and unreal, sadness
and loss, then sudden shifts out of the blue, and plenty of the
plain runic. . . . [The Strange Library] plumb[s] the kind of
questions that leave us all wishing for more room to breathe: the
singular and ever-solitary individual . . . the loss of identity
(for better or worse), groping in the dark, self-understanding in
an unknowable world, the dignity of idiosyncrasies. . . . The
spirit and tone of the writing: As if Murakami is driving down a
strange road, not know[ing] what’s to come around the next curve:
alert, aware, but as in the dark as the reader. He is, however, a
really good driver.” —The Christian Science Monitor
“Those who come to Mr. Murakami’s work for the first time will be
elated by the clarity and wit of his style as translated by Ted
Goossen, and intrigued by his characters and the situations they
face. The Strange Library . . . stays in the mind because of
its combination of brutality with flippancy, but mostly for its
oddness. . . . In its own odd way it is a fun read.”—Washington
Times
“The Strange Library is a subteen’s No Exit. . . .
Beautifully designed. . . . Perfect for coffee tables in the
gladsome season. . . . Readers looking for a light diversion in a
heavily loaded holiday season should enjoy this existential
vision.” —The Miami Herald
“Japanese master Haruki Murakami's short fantasy tale The Strange
Library, designed by Chip Kidd with sublime vintage Japanese
graphics, takes readers on a wondrous journey to the mysterious
underbelly of a Tokyo library.” —Elle
“Striking. . . . [This] dryly funny, concise fable has all the
hallmarks of the author’s deadpan magic, along with some Grimm and
Lewis Carroll thrown in for good measure. . . . The perfect trip
down the rabbit hole.” —The Free Lance-Star (Fredericksburg)
“Murakami manages to endow [these] pages with all that we have come
to expect from his more leviathan tomes. . . . [Chip Kidd’s
illustrations] seem so essential that, having experienced
Murakami’s story in this version, one can hardly imagine it in any
other form.” —The Japan Times
“Dreamlike. . . . What is immediately clear . . . is just how much
thought went into the design and illustrated content. . . .
Published by Knopf, the U.S. edition is a Chip
Kidd production, and while Kidd’s prolific portfolio
demonstrates how comfortable he is working within any and all
design idioms, The Strange Library is an in-your-face
zoom-in on the faded comics qualities Kidd so often employs when
working on Murakami titles. . . . [The illustrations] are what
ignite the reader’s thoughts about what the narrator is up against.
. . . The designs force the reader to actually read, and read into,
the design. . . . Everything that comes to pass in The Strange
Library, like in so much of Murakami’s fiction, questions the
differences between what is real and what is not, and whether such
a distinction even matters. . . . Evocative, atmospheric.” —The
Millions
“Can a font be heart-breaking? I didn’t think so, until now. . . .
More than anything, I found myself free-associating while
reading The Strange Library: Kafka, Dalí, Nabokov, and Poe all
came to mind.” —Jon Morris, PopMatters
“Designed by Chip Kidd, nearly every other page contains a
beautiful image, often an abstract representation of what is
happening to the narrator. This sinister story and gorgeous artwork
come together like an unforgettable nightmare. This one has some
major gifting potential.” —Bustle
“At once beguiling and disquieting—in short, trademark Murakami—a
fast read that sticks in the mind. . . . Murakami loves two things
among many: Franz Kafka (think Kafka on the Shore) and secret
places (think 1Q84). This latest, brief and terse, combines
those two passions. . . . It would take a Terry Gilliam, or perhaps
a Kurosawa, to film Murakami’s nightmare properly.” —Kirkus
Reviews
“This dryly funny, concise fable features all the hallmarks of
Murakami's deadpan magic, along with splashes of Lewis Carroll and
the brothers Grimm. . . . Full-page designs from Chip Kidd divide
the sections, bolstering the book's otherworldliness with images
from the text alongside mazelike designs and dizzying close-ups of
painted faces.” —Publishers Weekly
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