Synopses & Reviews
Almost Transparent Blue is a brutal tale of lost youth in a Japanese port town close to an American military base. Murakami?s image-intensive narrative paints a portrait of a group of friends locked in a destructive cycle of sex, drugs and rock?n?roll. The novel is all but plotless, but the raw and often violent prose takes us on a rollercoaster ride through reality and hallucination, highs and lows, in which the characters and their experiences come vividly to life. Trapped in passivity, they gain neither passion nor pleasure from their adventures. Yet out of the alienation, boredom and underlying rage and grief emerges a strangely quiet and almost equally shocking beauty. Ryu Murakami?s first novel, Almost Transparent Blue won the coveted Akutagawa literary prize and became an instant bestseller. Representing a sharp and conscious turning away from the introspective trend of postwar Japanese literature, it polarized critics and public alike and soon attracted international attention as an alternative view of modern Japan.
Review
"A Japanese mix of A Clockwork Orange and L'Etranger." -Newsweek
"Bugs and mucus, cheesecake and semen, rain and runways-all lovingly described." - Washington Post
"Highly recommended for readers of the bizarre." -Antioch Review
"A violent book-sharply begun and slammed quickly to a finish." -Bestsellers
Review
"A Japanese mix of A Clockwork Orange and L'Etranger." -Newsweek
"Bugs and mucus, cheesecake and semen, rain and runways-all lovingly described." - Washington Post
"Highly recommended for readers of the bizarre." -Antioch Review
"A violent book-sharply begun and slammed quickly to a finish." -Bestsellers
About the Author
RYU MURAKAMI was born in 1952. The only son of schoolteacher parents, he grew up in the port city of Sasebo in southwestern Japan. After graduating from a local high school, where he played the drums in a band called Coelacanth, he went to an art college in Tokyo. It was while studying there that he entered his first novel,
Almost Transparent Blue, in a competition for new writers. Published in 1976, the book won a major literary award and sold over a million copies. Since then, he has worked for a publishing house, presented a weekly music and interview radio program, and hosted a TV talk show. His literary output includes two collections of stories
Run, Takahashi (1985) and
Topaz (1988), and the novel
Coin Locker Babies (1980), which made its debut in English early in 1995. His roman a clef 69 appeared in English in 1993. He has also directed four movies based on his writing, causing a sensation at an Italian film festival when
Tokyo Decadence was shown there in 1992. His latest film is set in the U.S. and Cuba.