![]() ![]() Some of these experiences, as the narrator notes in “Carnaval,” are “nothing more than … minor incidents that happened in my trivial little life. ![]() Often, in the middle of a story, a memory will trigger another memory, through a sort of mnemonic leap the result can be like a confusingly drawn map that means more to the creator than the reader. In this collection, an older narrator goes sifting through the events of his past, some of them surreal and unexplainable. These elements are certainly on display in his new story collection, First Person Singular, but the dominant mode here is memory. There is his immense popularity, of course, but also the strange radiance of his work and his tendency to present mysteries or puzzles with no solutions. One begins a new Haruki Murakami book with high expectations. First Person Singular by Haruki Murakami, translated by Philip Gabriel ![]()
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