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Anyone else got a bit bored with Norwegian Wood?

32 replies

Schulte · 29/10/2010 20:31

I mean it's a good book and that guy's a great writer but all that shagging and beer drinking is starting to grate. It's a bit like Betty Blue, only Betty Blue is better. Or AIBU? Grin

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anonacfr · 23/11/2010 12:45

I also love his books. I found Norwegian Wood lovely and nostalgic. It did make me cry but then anything that deals with suicide does.

Haven't read David Mitchell for a while. I absolutely loved Cloud Atlas when I read it a few years back. Which is the one with the Japanese cult suicide bomber type character? That was also pretty good.

I need to re-read them.

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cazzybabs · 08/11/2010 09:36

Ohh I quite liked it but then I like all of his books. They are all quite odd - infact Norwegian Wood is the least odd

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sarah293 · 08/11/2010 09:31

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UnquietDad · 08/11/2010 09:14

I didn't just get "a bit bored" with it - I got utterly pissed off with it. The endless descriptions of drinking in bars and what people ate, the soulless female characters and self-absorbed narrator... I hated it more with each page.

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ensure · 08/11/2010 09:08

Norwegian Wood, I found very very dull. I avoided Murakami afterwards then picked up The Wind Up Bird Chronicles years later for some reason and loved it.

David Mitchell- you can see Murakami's influence sometimes in some books I think, but Cloud Atlas, for example, isn't very Murakami-y at all.

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Schulte · 31/10/2010 13:03

Meg - you do Smile

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MarshaBrady · 29/10/2010 21:42

Enjoy.I know the red wine is working when I write posts like the last one Grin

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MegBusset · 29/10/2010 21:41
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Schulte · 29/10/2010 21:40

Sorry, did that sound patronising? 'Am in awe' describes it better.

Off to bed with Murakami now... am determined to finish it.

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Schulte · 29/10/2010 21:38

Wow, Marsha. Sounds like you have achieved a lot to me. Smile

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MegBusset · 29/10/2010 21:32

Yes, it's more of a 'straight' story based in English suburban coming-of-age trope but with a darker undercurrent and just so perfectly written.

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Themasterandmargaritas · 29/10/2010 21:29

Cloud Atlas was definitely strange, but strangely compelling. Is Black Swan his latest?

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MarshaBrady · 29/10/2010 21:29

Oh god. I am SUCH a pile of spaghetti.

I did publishing, then design, then strategy, then thought fark this for a pile of shite and became a painter. Sounds crap but have done international museum shows with all the greats (Freud, Saville, Katz etc etc). Has nearly worked out, just got to pump up my flagging career Grin

The literature degree segued into Baudrillard and Derrida. Oh and an economics degree, nearly became a mang consultant too but wore dms to interview.

In fact I had a sliding doors moment at 17 when they scheduled advanced statistics with european literature. I chose Camus and the Gulag, Solzhenitsyn. Bastards Wink

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MegBusset · 29/10/2010 21:27

He's vastly overrated imo. I've tried NW, Wild Sheep Chase and the Wind-UP Bird Chronicle and found them OK but no more.

David Mitchell otoh I do love, less studenty and a bit more... strange. Cloud Atlas and Black Swan Green in particular.

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Themasterandmargaritas · 29/10/2010 21:23

I'm not yet past chapter two. I'll stick with it a little.

His running books is inspiring. If you like running that is. Smile

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Schulte · 29/10/2010 21:21

Grin And what did you end up doing for a living?

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MarshaBrady · 29/10/2010 21:19

I subscribe to Junior magazine and flick through in five minutes Blush.

But writing a list of books just reminded me of what it was like to be 22. I was soo fiercely in love with good writing back then. (and studying literature)

Worked at a publishers for a year, then realised doing book launches with authors was a weak substitute Grin

And I cried at the salary!

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Schulte · 29/10/2010 21:16

Oh and I read Paul Auster's Invisible recently and enjoyed that.

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Schulte · 29/10/2010 21:15

I haven't had much time to read recently... but my heroes used to be Hemingway, Djian, Steinbeck, Kafka, Camus. Then there were some Irving books that I loved. And then I started to read Mother & Baby magazine Blush

All my books are in boxes at the moment though as we've just moved house and haven't put any bookshelves up yet.

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Unprune · 29/10/2010 21:15

In fact I was going to get a David Mitchell book on Audible, and read up on him. Apparently he's the British Murakami. I immediately thought: ok, no ta.

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MarshaBrady · 29/10/2010 21:04

We have the same taste Smile

What have you loved recently?

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Schulte · 29/10/2010 21:03

Oh good, there are some in there that I haven't read. I bought my dad a beautiful big Pessoa book for his birthday years ago and I don't think he's even opened it!

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MarshaBrady · 29/10/2010 20:58

Ok
Looking at my books on the shelf my faves are

Bulgakov
Waugh
Chekhov
Pessoa
Capote
Carey
Calvino
Nabokov
White
Tabucchi

Sorry these are so obvious. I haven't had time to read for ages and I get library books these days and never finish them. And after a red wine I weirdly cannot remember those right now!

But Carver is great, any of his short stories. Ah I am tied up with children and miss books.

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Schulte · 29/10/2010 20:47

I see what you mean.

Also a big fan of Camus.

Go on, recommend some books!

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BellaBearisWideAwake · 29/10/2010 20:46

Oh god I hate his books. And all my family love them and think I'm weird for not 'getting' them. Bah.

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