fantasy book reviews science fiction book reviewsHear the Wind Sing by Haruki MurakamiHear the Wind Sing by Haruki Murakami

First published in 1979, Hear the Wind Sing is Haruki Murakami’s debut novel (or novella, depending upon where one draws the line). An unnamed narrator tells the story of what happened to him over the course of eighteen days when he was a university student. He spends most of his time either drinking beer with his friend, “The Rat,” or else in a confused relationship with a woman.

To be honest, I did not enjoy Hear the Wind Sing, since I prefer to latch onto the plot when reading. The novel is divided into forty chapters, and though a larger narrative loosely ties everything together, Hear the Wind Sing might actually be better read as a series of related vignettes that produce an overall feeling of aimlessness and detachment.

And as I read further, I found myself approaching each chapter as an exercise or experiment in which Murakami, up late at night after closing his jazz bar, explored what he could do with a pen and paper. Given the novel’s opening line — “There’s no such thing as perfect writing, just as there’s no such thing as perfect despair” — perhaps navigating his way through the act of writing a novel was on Murakami’s mind as much as plotting.

fantasy book reviews science fiction book reviewsI did, however, enjoy those moments when I could see hints of what was to come later in Murakami’s career, and I suspect many of Murakami’s fans will feel the same. At one point, a character suggests that an intelligent mind is distinguished by its ability to simultaneously hold contradictory thoughts, which recalled Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World. Cats appear briefly, as do jazz records and Western music. The protagonist struggles to form relationships, which recalls many of Murakami’s later heroes.

Hear the Wind Sing is the first of two novels tied together around “The Rat.” If I had not already read much of Murakami’s later work, I’m not sure I would read the second novel, Pinball, 1973. The narrator’s descriptions of the three women he’s slept with did not interest me, nor did the time he spent drinking beer with the Rat. In short, I’d recommend this short novel only to Murakami’s most devoted fans.

I listened to Penguin Random House Audio’s production of Hear the Wind Sing. Kirby Heyborne’s reading was smooth throughout and never once took me out of the story. Hear the Wind Sing was originally published in Japanese and Ted Goosen translated the story into English.

Author

  • Ryan Skardal

    RYAN SKARDAL, on our staff from September 2010 to November 2018, is an English teacher who reads widely but always makes time for SFF.