At some point, you just have to accept Kafka on the Shore for what it is — a metaphor, a home of symbolism, an LSD trip in literary form.
After every few chapters, I'd theorize a possible explanation for what's going on. Every time I read on, I get debunked. The book ends with lots of strings untied, yet it doesn't feel unfinished. It's art for the sake of art — it doesn't make sense, and it doesn't have to. If that interests you, pick it up, and grab an umbrella while you're at it. Might rain cats and dogs, who knows?
After reading Kafka on the Shore, I swayed on my hammock and saw a rainbow form among the clouds. I watched the birds to ground myself back to reality.
Reviews and Comments
A humanities girl masquerading as an engineering student. 🎭
I am in love with the following things, in no particular order: wilted flowers pressed between book pages, Gameboy Advance emulators, unrequited affection, and writing. I pick up whatever books I get my hands on.
This link opens in a pop-up window
Ika reviewed Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami
Review of 'Kafka on the Shore' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
Ika rated A normal life and other stories: 3 stars
Ika reviewed Education of an Idealist by Samantha Power
Review of 'Education of an Idealist' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
3.5/5
A detailed and vivid account of Samantha Power's journey as a child immigrant, a war correspondent, and a representative of America in the United Nations.
I come out of this book having learned that the government/UN is not an entity, but a building in which individuals come together and engage with complex decisions quite unlikely to be ideal to all. As such, changing the world is not accomplished by one grandeur act, but by doing good in individual events and enacting change in ways within one's reach.
The writing is blunt and very detailed, but I found that the strength of the storytelling waned as the pages went on. There were parts of the book that deeply engaged me, but others were difficult to get through. This inconsistency is my only concern. Aside from that, the content of the book was informative and positively calls for further introspection from …
3.5/5
A detailed and vivid account of Samantha Power's journey as a child immigrant, a war correspondent, and a representative of America in the United Nations.
I come out of this book having learned that the government/UN is not an entity, but a building in which individuals come together and engage with complex decisions quite unlikely to be ideal to all. As such, changing the world is not accomplished by one grandeur act, but by doing good in individual events and enacting change in ways within one's reach.
The writing is blunt and very detailed, but I found that the strength of the storytelling waned as the pages went on. There were parts of the book that deeply engaged me, but others were difficult to get through. This inconsistency is my only concern. Aside from that, the content of the book was informative and positively calls for further introspection from the readers.
Ika rated Life, the Universe, and Everything: 3 stars
Life, the Universe, and Everything by Douglas Adams
Life, the Universe and Everything (1982, ISBN 0-345-39182-9) is the third book in the five-volume Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy …
克拉拉与太阳 by Kazuo Ishiguro, 宋佥
克拉拉是一个专为陪伴儿童而设计的太阳能人工智能机器人(AF),具有极高的观察、推理与共情能力。她坐在商店展示橱窗里,注视着街头路人以及前来浏览橱窗的孩子们的一举一动。她始终期待着很快就会有人挑中她,不过,当这种永久改变境遇的可能性出现时,克拉拉却被提醒不要过分相信人类的诺言。
在《克拉拉与太阳》这部作品中,石黑一雄通过一位令人难忘的叙述者的视角,观察千变万化的现代社会,探索了一个根本性的问题:究竟什么是爱?
Ika reviewed Bewilderment by Richard Powers
Review of 'Bewilderment' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
It explores everything in one book — space, existentialism, disability, environmentalism, and politics. It's the first time that my fixation on the Fermi paradox became useful to me, as the book referenced it a few times in its questioning of humanity's loneliness. This was a brilliant read, with references to past works and current events. I could not put down the first half of the book. However, exaggerations on the incompetence of the government (with ~everyone~ in authority seemingly against science, and the president having full-control on all three branches of the gov) chipped away at realism rather than contributed to it. The broadness of the book's themes is its strength as well as its weakness, as the development of its political aspect paled in comparison to the exploration of Robin's differences through his relationships with people.
Ika rated Social realism in the Philippines: 4 stars
Ika reviewed The Confessions of Max Tivoli by Andrew Sean Greer
Review of 'The Confessions of Max Tivoli' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
"We are each the love of someone's life."
I first read snippets of this book at an age too young — when I was still in elementary school, in fact. I was eleven years old and had not come from an English-speaking household, so I neither had the proper language skills nor sufficient life experience to fully grasp the scenes described, much less the meaning behind them. Yet, it was one of the very few books in our house, so I sometimes found myself squinting at the pages, trying to extract meaning from what little words I knew.
Every few years since then, I've read and reread the story from front to back. Each time, it would reveal a secret to me — a message or another I had missed from my last reading. Maybe it is this constant revisiting that made me fall in love with the story much …
"We are each the love of someone's life."
I first read snippets of this book at an age too young — when I was still in elementary school, in fact. I was eleven years old and had not come from an English-speaking household, so I neither had the proper language skills nor sufficient life experience to fully grasp the scenes described, much less the meaning behind them. Yet, it was one of the very few books in our house, so I sometimes found myself squinting at the pages, trying to extract meaning from what little words I knew.
Every few years since then, I've read and reread the story from front to back. Each time, it would reveal a secret to me — a message or another I had missed from my last reading. Maybe it is this constant revisiting that made me fall in love with the story much like Max meeting with Alice in several, disparate points in his life. It's a story of a romance doomed from the very beginning. The lust for a life well-lived, a desire one cannot satisfy, a contrast of wealth and poverty and old age and youth and tragedy and love — all these come together to hammer in the message: "we are each the love of someone's life."
Ika rated One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest: 3 stars
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962) is a novel written by Ken Kesey. Set in an Oregon psychiatric hospital, …
Ika rated Artemis Fowl and the Eternity Code: 3 stars
Artemis Fowl and the Eternity Code by Siân Melangell Dafydd, Eoin Colfer, Eoin Colfer (Artemis Fowl)
Artemis Fowl: The Eternity Code (known as Artemis Fowl and the Eternity Code in Europe) is the third book of …
Ika rated The Communist Manifesto: 4 stars
The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels (Penguin classics)
A rousing call to arms whose influence is still felt today
Originally published on the eve of the 1848 European …
Ika reviewed The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway (Scribner classics)
Review of 'The old man and the sea' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
For how much can you break the human spirit?
Ernest Hemingway starts by building up the story in a seemingly dry, straight-forward fashion — here, Hemingway starts, introducing the wise fisherman of the story, this is an unlucky old man.
During the first few pages, I found myself at odds with his way of writing. Where was the beautiful prose? It's my very first book from this author. I did not find his words as striking and vivid as I'd expected them to be. However, as the story continued on, I realized that the beauty was contained in the old man's experiences — not confined in the way of its retelling.The resilience, passion, hope, sadness, and suffering that made up the themes of the story were beautifully explored in a fisherman's experience at the sea.
Overall, this book has left me with various emotions to struggle with. I found parallels …
For how much can you break the human spirit?
Ernest Hemingway starts by building up the story in a seemingly dry, straight-forward fashion — here, Hemingway starts, introducing the wise fisherman of the story, this is an unlucky old man.
During the first few pages, I found myself at odds with his way of writing. Where was the beautiful prose? It's my very first book from this author. I did not find his words as striking and vivid as I'd expected them to be. However, as the story continued on, I realized that the beauty was contained in the old man's experiences — not confined in the way of its retelling.The resilience, passion, hope, sadness, and suffering that made up the themes of the story were beautifully explored in a fisherman's experience at the sea.
Overall, this book has left me with various emotions to struggle with. I found parallels in the slow tearing of the old man's spirit to my own experiences having been undiagnosed for much of my life for a well-masked neurodevelopmental disorder. The consistent failures from something seemingly innate but unknown had been a source of hopelessness, and this book has thoroughly presented what it's like and elicits the same emotions. It is, in a deranged comforting way, a testament that the human experience is shared in the many variations of our day-to-day lives.
There is much meaning to be gained from this book, and I've no doubt that the story is something that I'll carry with me and revisit every so often.