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South of the Border, West of the Sun

South of the Border, West of the Sun
Author: Haruki Murakami
Publisher: Vintage
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy New: £5.99
You Save: £2.00 (25%)



New (24) Used (8) from £2.25

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 34 reviews
Sales Rank: 7277

Media: Paperback
Edition: New edition
Pages: 192
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 0.6

ISBN: 0099448572
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780099448570
ASIN: 0099448572

Publication Date: June 1, 2000
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - South of the Border, West of the Sun (Panther)
  • Paperback - South of the Border, West of the Sun
  • Paperback - South of the Border, West of the Sun
  • Hardcover - South of the Border, West of the Sun

Similar Items:

  • Sputnik Sweetheart
  • Norwegian Wood
  • Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World
  • The Wind-up Bird Chronicle
  • A Wild Sheep Chase

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
In South of the Border, West of the Sun the arc of an average man's life from childhood to middle age with its attendant rhythms of success and disappointment becomes the kind of exquisite literary conundrum that is Haruki Murakami's trademark. The plot is simple: Hajime meets and falls in love with a girl in elementary school but loses touch with her when his family moves to another town. He drifts through high school, college and his 20s before marrying and settling into a career as a successful bar owner. Then his childhood sweetheart returns weighed down with secrets:
"When I went back into the bar, a glass and ashtray remained where she had been. A couple of lightly crushed cigarette butts were lined up in the ashtray, a faint trace of lipstick on each. I sat down and closed my eyes. Echoes of music faded away, leaving me alone. In that gentle darkness, the rain continued to fall without a sound".
Murakami eschews the fantastic elements that appear in many of his other novels and stories, and readers hoping for a glimpse of the "Sheep Man" will be disappointed. Yet South of the Border, West of the Sun is as rich and mysterious as anything he has written. It is above all a complex, moving and honest meditation on the nature of love distilled into a work with the crystal clarity of a short story. A Nat King Cole song, a figure on a crowded street, a face pressed against a car window, a handful of ashes drifting down a river to the sea are woven together into a story that refuses to arrive at a simple conclusion. The classic love triangle may seem like a hackneyed theme for a writer as talented as Murakami but in his quietly dazzling way he bends us to his own unique geometry. --Simon Leake, Amazon.com



Customer Reviews:   Read 29 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Snow outside, a warm log fire inside   September 7, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Reading this book is like being on a mysterious, magical and deeply moving journey through your own mind. It drew me in and kept me there right alongside Hajime, the main character from start to finish. Every feeling and emotion is shared equally between the reader, author and Hajime. It was like experiencing my favourite song playing as the backing track to my favourite film based on my favourite book.


3 out of 5 stars Gabriel Vs Rubin- Rubin wins.   August 18, 2008
This is a quality novella/short story from Murakami. But as an avid fan I was disappointed by the translation. Having read most of Murakami I often feel that Philip Gabriels's translations leave something to be desired or lose the essential message that Murakami tries to put across. If you look at Murakami's best known works- Norwegian Wood, Wind Up Bird, After Dark, these are the bestselling and best loved and it's no coincidence that they are all translated by Jay Rubin. I felt rather distanced from this one and that the meaning needed further interpretation from the reader. The reader is left frustrated by the surrealism of the relationships in South of The Border and overall it feels unfinished. Many things in Murakami are, of course, left unresolved, but somehow a skilled translator is able to suggest an ending to the reader. See Norwegian Wood for an example. Gabriel is unable to do this. There are some great scenes in SOTBWOTS, great atmospherics involving the usual symbols (Coffee, Jazz, cool bars, distant women) but as a whole it is not a good starting point for those reading Murakami for the first time (Try After Dark). I felt, also, that a really good translation could turn this book into something truly great. Unlike manay of Murkami's other works there is a hint of politics in this one- a suggestion of the Author's despair at the greed and state of modern Tokyo- Greed is represented in the form of Yokio's Father- a wealthy industrialist who becomes corrupted. All in all, there is a great novel at the heart of this but it's one to discover when you've already read the really great ones.


3 out of 5 stars A narcissist's middle-age crisis   July 3, 2008
South of the Border, West of the Sun is written in the first person [as far as I can tell quite characteristic of Murakami] and is the narrative of a Japanese man's love life. I am not a great fun of autobiographical or psedo-autobiographical writing as I prefer the polyphony of a novel to the sometimes monotonous and narcissistic style of those works.
This is no exception; the main character rambles about: his preferences in women, his sensitivities in love issues, his experiences, his boredom, his feelings. There is little connection or understanding of anything around him or how the other characters in the book feel, it is a one man's story and a particularly emotional, self-absorbed kind of man for that matter.

*** slight plot spoiler following***
I assume it was the purpose of the author to show the fragmented human experience by not allowing us to learn the truth about any other character -we only know what the main character knows and he doesn't know much- but I felt disappointed by the end. The second part of the book continuously promises to give you the story of the Shimamoto but we learn nothing which makes the narrative even more subjective. Is Shimamoto really the interesting, beautiful, tragic woman Hajime fantasizes about or is she merely a construction of his imagination providing the mystery and drama that a narcissist needs to feel life worth living. [I don't use the word narcissist randomly but as a matter of fact characteristic of the hero which is pointed by Murakami himself through Hajime's wife when she points out that 'you don't ask anything'].

***end spoiler****

It is fairly well written and consistent piece of writing and if you are interested in reading the monologue of a middle-aged man going on and on about his sensitivities it might be time well spent, for my point of view there are enough men in my life going on and on about their feelings as it is, the next book I'll read will either be complex novel with multiple heros or at least it will have a more intriguing main character.



4 out of 5 stars Melancholic view of modern contemporary life   April 14, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This minimalist novel tracks the life of a middle aged man in Japan. Born in 1951, he grew up in a suburb outside one of Japan's great cities. At 12, he fell in love with one of his schoolmates, a girl called Shimamoto. However, she soon left town with his parents. After that, life went on for him. At high school he started going out with girls, he went out and study literature at the university, after that he was employed in a boring job at a publishing company. Fortunately for him, at thirty he married the daughter of a rich (if somewhat shady) man, the owner of a construction company. With the help of his father in law, he decides to open a bar, which becomes succesful. Married with two girls, owner of a succesful business, life seems to go fine with him now. Until he meets again Shimamoto, and life threatens to unravel for him. A fine melancholic novel by Japan's Murakami, about the solitude of modern life, it includes some steamy and even graphic love scenes.


5 out of 5 stars Another Marvellous Murakami   March 18, 2008
I thought this was a beautifully written book. I have now read every single Murakami book (except the new one, waiting for that in paperback). Some I haven't liked and some I have loved. This one I loved.

Murakami takes a simple tale of a man's childhood crush and turns it into a gut wrenching tale of obsession and loss. If anyone has ever been in love with someone to the point of obsession (unfortunately I have) then this story will bring you to tears.

I would say this is in my top 3 Murakami. My favourite is Wind Up Bird Chronicle.... Don't worry I am over the guy I was obsessed with now. I think ;-)


 
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