Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World

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Cover of Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World by Haruki Murakami 0099448785title:

Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World

author:Haruki Murakami
format:Paperback Buy Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World Now
publisher:Vintage
released:September 28, 2001
isbn:0099448785
isbn-13:9780099448785
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Customer Reviews

Amazing - Rated 5/5
This is the first Murakami book I've read and I felt compelled to review it afterwards, as it thoroughly engrossed and compelled me. This book is full of surreal happenings and powerful imagery. The story is such a clever idea and is unlike anything I've ever read before. You get drawn into a story which reads like a thriller at times, and at others times is a ethereal mystery. It is a book about the power of the subconscious mind and the landscape of the mind. I personally would recommend it to anybody!


Unicorns at the end of the world - Rated 5/5
Imagine if Raymond Chandler had collaborated with David Lynch, maybe with Philip K. Dick throwing in a few cents every now and then.

That gives you some idea of what Haruki Murakami's "Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World" is like. Split into two different, barely-intertwined narratives, Murakami's quirkily bittersweet novel is a bizarre sci-fi mystery and an exploration of the human mind's limits... right to the world's end. It's a brilliant, bittersweetly intricate novel, and one of Murakami's best.

The protagonist is just doing his job -- he's a "shuffler," with a chip in his brain -- when he visits an eccentric scientist and his precocious granddaughter. But then he gets sent an animal skull, which appears to be a unicorn's. And even weirder, corporate agents are invading his home and tearing it apart.

At the same time -- in alternating chapters -- we are told the story of a man who arrives at a walled city surrounded by unicorns, at the End of the World. He becomes the Dreamreader at the library, finding memories hidden in skulls. But he soon discovers that this city is a prison of sorts -- and that after surrendering his shadow, he faces losing his soul.

Meanwhile, the original narrator -- who may also be the second -- is called in by the granddaughter when her grandfather disappears. Turns out the whole world may be about to end. The two brave an underground cavern riddled with voracious, monstrous INKlings, only for the narrator to discover that the greatest danger is in his own mind -- and it offer a terrifying, glorious possibility to him.

Not many serious authors could write about computer chips, unicorns, sci-fi corporations, the intricacies of brain "circuitry," and sewers full of nasty Japanese hobgoblins who like rotting meat. All in the same book, and without making you shake your head and groan "Aw, come on!".

But amazingly, that is not what makes "Hard Boiled Wonderland And The End of the World" a work of genius. Rather it's that "Hard Boiled Wonderland" and "The End of the World" are two separate books -- one is written in angular, wry prose in a grimy urban landscape, with moments of horror woven in. And one is written in flowing, soft, almost dreamlike prose in a pale, almost idyllic world that may or may not be real.

In both stories, Murakami weaves intricate, detailed webs of words, evoking subterranean chases from flesh-eating kappas and mildly comic encounters with thugs, as well as the poignant emptiness of the End of the World city. And he explores the whole concept of the mind being infinite, and that time does not exist in our dreams.

As both plots wind on, Murakami intricately twines them together. Hints, phrases, a shared lover, and the whole question of unicorns -- these tie together the two alternating plots, first in tiny ways. As the final quarter of the book unfolds, Murakami paints a complex vision of just what is going on for our unlikely heroes -- and reveals just where the End of the World is.

And it's even harder to tell at first if there is are two narrators, or if one of them is dreamed, in another time, or on another planet. The Shuffler and Dreamreader seem like very different men, but similarities start to pop up between them -- such as their dual attractions to pretty young librarians -- but Murakami successfully keeps you guessing until he reveals what the Shuffler and Dreamreader truly are.

"Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World" is a masterpiece of modern fiction -- a sci-fi mystery that looks to the horizon of the human mind, written as two intertwined stories. Definitely outstanding.


Forced - Rated 3/5
Having read, and enjoyed The Wind-up Bird Chronicle by Murakami, I was expecting something equally as good from this book, but I was rather disappointed.

Simply put, the book feels forced and pretentious. Not necessarily the storyline, but the flow of ideas. It feels as if Murakami has found an idea he wants to put across, then works backwards, constructing a story that leads to this final idea of accepting the end of the world. However, this story is like a cut-and-paste. Characters come in, concepts are thought up, and places made just to channel the character towards the final end. It's almost as if most of the pieces of the story have been put in place just because the writer CAN put them in. The pages are cluttered with unnecessary detours, leeches, climbing ladders and "information wars".

All this detracted from the book. Much like the unnecessary detour in The Wind-up Bird Chronicle where Manchuria is mentioned. That felt like it was put in just to make the book controversial in Japan. With Hard-Boiled Wonderland, it feels like the whole book was an unnecessary detour from the meaning, which was itself clearly evident at the end of the book, but came about with such lack of subtlety that any impact was lost.

In this book Murakami is about as subtle as a hammer. It's almost painful to read the way he tries to force the two worlds to come into some sort of contact with one another (i.e. through skulls) throughout the book. It's a shame really because I had high hopes for this book, but it may have tarnished my view of Murakami.

This book needs a May Kasahara.


Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World - Rated 4/5
This a really interesting book. Murakami has a very distinct style, mixing lyrical prose with deeper philosophical ideas. However, the book is let down by the editing; it has not been properly proof-read which is incredibly frustrating as there are some sections where the meaning of the sentence is lost because the words are jumbled or repeated in a way that is indecipherable.

The book itself is very readable, placing two stories side-by-side, and alternating their telling each chapter. The unnamed narrator, like most of Murakami's narrators, is a fairly ordinary guy who gets drawn into something bigger than his lot and must wade through these new problems to reach a solution. It's almost like a detective book, mixed with elements sci-fi. The book is most interested when Murakami begins his discussion of the human consciousness, identity, and how outside stimulants can affect it. Though it's quite a large topic, Murakami stays away scientific techno-babble and describes it in easily manageable sections that are thought-provoking but not confusing.

On surface level you have an intriguing narrative with several quirky characters and an interesting way of moving the story forward in the two plots placed side-by-side. Everything is cleverly interlinked, and though the story seems to end quite abruptly, almost on a note of sadness, it's up there with my favourite Murakami books. I just wish the editors would take more time over their proof-reads.


Hard Boiled Wonderland - Murakami - Rated 5/5
I've just finished this book, and i was hugely impressed with yet another slice of the immensley talented murakami's work.

Unicorns, conciousness, left and right brain...not something that initially would interest lots of people, but just for the sheer brilliance of how the two stories running parralell manage to intertwine, you must read this book.

I could fill this review with superlatives about the pace and atmosphere, but the way Murakami manages to display such imagination is nothing short of stunning, and speaks volumes about what is contained within this surreal tale. Excellent stuff yet again from one of the worlds greatest authors.

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