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NOVELIST AS A VOCATION by Haruki Murakami

NOVELIST AS A VOCATION

by Haruki Murakami ; translated by Philip Gabriel & Ted Goossen

Pub Date: Nov. 8th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-451-49464-1
Publisher: Knopf

The acclaimed novelist opens up about his methods and how he creates his own private worlds.

In a series of self-deprecating, introspective essays, six previously published, five written for this book, Murakami shares his modest views on writing. The fact that he has been able “to write novels as a profession…continues to amaze me.” He begins with generalities: what qualities successful novelists possess and how they are able to sustain them. The author recounts how, at 29, married, attending school and struggling to keep his jazz cafe afloat, he was outside watching a baseball game, and “based on no grounds whatsoever, it suddenly struck me: I think I can write a novel.” He wrote his first novel—later to become Hear the Wind Sing—in rudimentary English, “a rough, uncultivated kind of prose.” He then “transplanted” it into Japanese in a “creative rhythm distinctly my own,” finding the “coolest chords, trusting in the power of improvisation.” Murakami believes his jazzy literary originality, voice, and style were born then. Even today, he doesn’t experience writer’s block. Words come out in a joyful “spontaneous flow” as his narratives grow lengthier and more complex. After dismissing the significance of literary prizes, he advises young writers to read numerous novels, good and bad, as he did growing up, observe the world around them, and draw upon their memories. Essays are “no more than sidelines, like the cans of oolong tea marketed by beer companies.” Stories are like “practice pieces.” When he composes his novels, he limits himself to 10 pages per day; then his wife reads it, and he makes countless revisions—“I have a deep-rooted love for tinkering.” Novelists require stamina, which Murakami gets from one of his favorite pastimes: running. Over time, he gradually began writing more in third person, creating more named characters and “simultaneously being created by the novel as well.” He doesn’t comment much on his own works nor those of others.

Dry and repetitious in places, Murakami’s gentle encouragement will appeal to hesitant novice writers.