Metacritic Books

Kafka On The Shore
by Haruki Murakami

ISBN: 1400043662
Knopf, 448 pages, $25.95
Fiction General Literature & Fiction
Released 01/18/2005

This surreal novel from the acclaimed Japanese novelist (The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle) focuses on two characters whose lives (as we eventually learn) are linked: a 15-year-old runaway in search of his mother and sister, and an elderly WWII veteran who can speak with cats.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

79 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding Kirkus Reviews
Murakami is of course himself an immensely reader-friendly novelist, and never has he offered more enticing fare than this enchantingly inventive tale. A masterpiece, entirely Nobel-worthy.
Outstanding Publishers Weekly
By [the end], his readers, like his characters, will go just about anywhere Murakami wants them to, whether they "get" it or not.
Outstanding Chicago Tribune Alan Cheuse
Reading Murakami, a world-class entertainer with a mysterious, metaphysical bent, is a striking experience in consciousness expansion. This new book, as powerful as "The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle" and because of the plot design even a bit more accessible, is a fine place to begin exploring Murakami's world, which is our own, with a few major surprises.
Outstanding The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Charles Foran
How Murakami renders such a bewildering story so compelling, and so touching, is a testament to his genius. As always with his fiction, part of the exhilaration comes from the feeling that the author had no more idea of where he might be headed when he was writing the book than readers have while reading it.
Outstanding The Independent James Urquhart
What a magnificently bewildering achievement Kafka on the Shore is. Brilliantly conceived, bold in its surreal scope, sexy, and driven by a snappy and often comical plot, Murakami's new work delves into the congested inner workings of our selves with characteristic brio.
Outstanding The Independent Matt Thorne
Contains more than enough mystery to delight fans, and will also entrance newcomers... This novel is Murakami's most addictive fix to date.
Outstanding Boston Globe Julie Wittes Schlack
Murakami's power to imagine is breathtaking and the empathy infusing Kafka on the Shore makes it a responsible book, one that is adult, wise, and forgiving.
Outstanding New York Observer David Thomson
You can say that this book proceeds by cross-cutting, going from one story to another, but then you have to account for the reader being as hooked as surely as if he were reading Agatha Christie or Hemingway, where the story is meant to go straight and taut like a fishing line with a trout on the hook.
Outstanding Washington Post Steven Moore
Murakami's spin on this theme and the Oedipus myth is daringly original and compulsively readable, enabled by Philip Gabriel's wonderfully fluent translation. Kafka on the Shore is warmly recommended; read it to your cat.
Outstanding The New York Times Book Review Laura Miller
While anyone can tell a story that resembles a dream, it's the rare artist, like this one, who can make us feel that we are dreaming it ourselves.
Outstanding Atlantic Monthly Jon Zobenica
This meta-fictional fun house isn't perfect, but underpinning it all is a surprisingly patient, deeply affecting meditation on perfection itself, specifically romantic perfection—the obsessive greed in pursuing it, the selfish isolation that comes from achieving it, the soul-killing (and also selfish) grief of outliving it, of being left, inevitably, with nothing but its fading memory.
Favorable Review Of Contemporary Fiction Steven G. Kellman
A beguiling romp. A bildungsroman written while Murakami was translating The Catcher in the Rye into Japanese, it proffers wisdom but at least delivers what a character calls "a lifetime of weird stuff packed into ten days."
Favorable The Observer Catherine Humble
Laden with philosophical overtones and enchanting wit, Murakami's story is at once childishly magical and astoundingly wise.
Favorable The New York Times Janet Maslin
However vague its allusions and overbearing its pretensions, however needlessly jive its English translation ("Jeez Louise"), this book makes for a beguiling and enveloping experience.
Favorable LA Weekly Sarah Chung
Nakata is perhaps Murakami’s most heartbreakingly pathetic creation.
Favorable San Francisco Chronicle Gideon Lewis-Kraus
Though Kafka on the Shore features scenes and characters, like Nakata, as marvelous as anything Murakami's written, the book as a whole is problematic: Its predicament is that in trying to be both kinds of Murakami novel, it manages to be neither.
Favorable The Onion A.V. Club Scott Tobias
Like the best of his work, Kafka On The Shore makes the eccentric seem transcendent, supplying his wayward narrative with one resonant image and encounter after another.
Favorable Los Angeles Times Richard Eder
Murakami's novel, though wearying at times and confusing at others, has the faintly absurd loft of some great festive balloon. He addresses the fantastic and the natural, each with the same mix of gravity and lightness.
Favorable Salon Charles Taylor
I loved reading Kafka on the Shore. The book may not, finally, add up (or not to anything deep), but it never feels hackneyed. Murakami has written a novel where the fantastic is trite and the everyday is profound.
Favorable The Spectator Philip Hensher
Works a powerful spell, its extremes of violence and sexual encounter drifting across its surface like a painless dream. Although there is a recurrent sense of unreality, what keeps the reader firmly attached to the demented flood of events is the certainty that there is a solid reality, however oddly expressed, at its heart.
Favorable Village Voice Paul Lafarge
As Oshima says, "[A] certain type of perfection can be realized only through a limitless accumulation of the imperfect." This is a clunker too, but it's delivered by a hermaphrodite who is driving a 15-year-old boy named Kafka to his mountain hideout, discussing Schubert all the while. The forest is rescued by the trees.
Favorable The New Yorker John Updike
A real page-turner, as well as an insistently metaphysical mind-bender. Spun out to four hundred and thirty-six pages, it seems more gripping than it has a right to be and less moving, perhaps, than the author wanted it to be.
Favorable The Guardian Tim Adams
The fun and drama of Murakami's storytelling is that you are never quite certain where those dreams end and where reality begins. His singular skill as a novelist lies in creating hallucinatory landscapes in which everything has an internal logic and much has the cool erotic intensity of fantasy.
Favorable The Guardian David Mitchell
I think it is fair to say that Kafka on the Shore is not one of Murakami's masterpieces..., but it is an inventive, alluring, striving novel, and would that more writers in translation hope to find such a large and hungry audience. Respect is due.
Favorable Entertainment Weekly Jennifer Reese
Like a dream, you just have to be there. And like a dream, what this dazzling novel means - or whether it means anything at all - we may never know.
Mixed Booklist Allison Block
Murakami's literary high-wire acts have earned him both boos and ahs from connoisseurs of contemporary fiction. What side you come down on depends on your predilection for the perverse. [15 Nov 2004, p.532]
Mixed Daily Telegraph Christopher Tayler
It will leave his long-term fans feeling slightly disappointed.
Unfavorable Daily Telegraph Theo Tait
It has kookiness to burn, then; but it lacks depth and originality... Despite flashes of the old genius, this gift too frequently fails him in Kafka on the Shore. What remains has the pat credulity and the kitschy mysticism of urban myth.
Unfavorable Sydney Morning Herald Michelle Griffin
The novel's wilful disregard for any kind of coherence, its many trite little lectures on artistic refinement, even the interchangeable voices of many of the characters, are flaws that nag and test the reader all the way through.

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