First word of Haruki Murakami's magnum opus1Q84
(pronounced 'ichi kyū hachi yon' in Japanese) only came to me today, a year or so after its publication in Japanese.
This might be partly due to the fact that the book was never translated to English (the first and second volumes of1Q84
are available in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. There is still no official word as to when the English versions would be available.) Or it might be because of the hefty, two-volume length of the novel: 1,055 pages.
Not that the Japanese are easily intimidated by this... the book sold nearly 500,000 copies before it was even published and it occupied the top two spots on Amazon Japan's book rankings for a few weeks after it finally was, in June 2009.
Hailed as a contemporary version of George Orwell's1984
, 1Q84 (Q is pronounced the same as 9 in Japanese, hence the word-play) is a dystopian novel; an alternative-reality story; an 'Alice in Wonderland' of of sorts, wherein a female sports instructor called Aomame accidentally descends an emergency staircase to a 'similar-but-different' world wherein she quickly becomes a serial killer for no apparent reason.
More on the menu is the story of Tengo, a passive-aggressive university entrance-exam math prep instructor whose lack of experience as a published author leads him to secretly rewrite a 17-year-old girl's surreal novel about a commune of little people, a girl and a blind goat, leaving the by-now-much-confused-reader with a novel-inside-a-novel micronarrative wherein crucial issues such as the writing process, cultism, sex, love, violence, loss, and murder are discussed in length.
The events elaborated in1Q84
take place (not too surprisingly) in 1984 (the 'real' one, not Orwell's).
But this isn't the 1984 we're used to; though Michael Jackson's hits flow out of car radios, Princess Diana is still alive, and Iran-Iraq war news is broadcast in CNN, little details painfully spotted by Aomame slowly lead us to understand that this is not 1984 after all, but rather a counterpart point in time (theOulipianswould have loved this novel, that much is sure by now).
I'm afraid thats all I have to say of this ambiguous novel at the moment.
Theexcerptfrom the book is in Japanese so there's not much I can make from it (I still don't trust Google translator enough to guide me through my literary decisions).
You'll have to make up your own mind when the book's finally published in English (if it ever will..)
VERDICT: DON'T BUY IT (until its published in English, duh..)
This might be partly due to the fact that the book was never translated to English (the first and second volumes of1Q84
Not that the Japanese are easily intimidated by this... the book sold nearly 500,000 copies before it was even published and it occupied the top two spots on Amazon Japan's book rankings for a few weeks after it finally was, in June 2009.

More on the menu is the story of Tengo, a passive-aggressive university entrance-exam math prep instructor whose lack of experience as a published author leads him to secretly rewrite a 17-year-old girl's surreal novel about a commune of little people, a girl and a blind goat, leaving the by-now-much-confused-reader with a novel-inside-a-novel micronarrative wherein crucial issues such as the writing process, cultism, sex, love, violence, loss, and murder are discussed in length.
The events elaborated in1Q84
But this isn't the 1984 we're used to; though Michael Jackson's hits flow out of car radios, Princess Diana is still alive, and Iran-Iraq war news is broadcast in CNN, little details painfully spotted by Aomame slowly lead us to understand that this is not 1984 after all, but rather a counterpart point in time (theOulipianswould have loved this novel, that much is sure by now).
I'm afraid thats all I have to say of this ambiguous novel at the moment.
Theexcerptfrom the book is in Japanese so there's not much I can make from it (I still don't trust Google translator enough to guide me through my literary decisions).
You'll have to make up your own mind when the book's finally published in English (if it ever will..)
VERDICT: DON'T BUY IT (until its published in English, duh..)