The Incredible Kitsu, on 27 April 2014 - 05:18 AM, said:
I finished THE WIND-UP BIRD CHRONICLE. That... was an odd book. I suspect I'll have to do a reread in the future to try to pick up on finer points that I must have missed.
Yeah, it certainly is that.
I actually think you'd be better (if you haven't already), just picking up a different Murakami rather than re-reading. Similar themes recur throughout most of his work, and I this means they sort of shed light on each other, and what he's getting at. Most people rate Wind-Up Bird as one of his strongest works (though for me it isn't quite up there), and it is very archetypical of him thematically and in terms of recurring motifs and ideas. However, I also found it quite a slow read in comparison to most of his other stuff. It might just be that I read it having read a few of his works in quick succession, so was starting to get burnt out on him. I suspect it's something else though. Perhaps the slowness is down to erratic style of it, I'm not sure.
I suppose what I'm getting at is that while I would absolutely recommend him as an author, Wind-Up Bird isn't the book I would recommend starting with. My recommendations in that regard would be either Dance Dance Dance (ignore that it's sort of a sequel, it works fine as a stand alone and the prequel is one of his weaker books), Kafka on the Shore (younger protagonist but I wouldn't really call it YA, though it deals with themes a lot of YA work does, as well as some that most YA work definitely doesn't), Norwegian Wood (a bit different from his typical work in a way, but the one that launched him to huge acclaim).