Haruki Murakami (村上春樹, born
January 12,
1949) is a popular Japanese writer and translator. His first novel "Hear the Wind Sing" won a literary prize in 1979. Murakami has since published several best-selling novels and short story collections. In 1986, Murakami left
Japan to live in Europe and America, but returned to Japan in the aftermath of the
Kobe earthquake and the
Aum Shinrikyo gas attack.
Murakami's fiction, which is often critisized for being "pop" literature by Japan's literary establishment, is humorous and surreal, and at the same time reflects an essential loneliness and longing for love in a way that has touched readers in the West as well as in East Asia.
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