Sputnik Sweetheart

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Sputnik Sweetheart (Vintage International)

by Haruki Murakami
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Sputnik Sweetheart finds Haruki Murakami in his minimalist mode. Shorter than the sweeping Wind-up Bird Chronicle, less playfully bizarre than A Wild Sheep Chase, the author's seventh novel distills his signature themes into a powerful story about the loneliness of the human condition. "There was nothing solid we could depend on," the reader is told. "We were nearly boundless zeros, just pitiful little beings swept from one kind of oblivion to another."
The narrator is a teacher whose only close friend is Sumire, an aspiring young novelist with chronic writer's block. Sumire is suddenly smitten with a sophisticated businesswoman and accompanies her love object to Europe where, on a tiny Greek island, she disappears "like smoke." The schoolteacher hastens to the island in search of his friend. And there he discovers two documents on her computer, one of which reveals a chilling secret about Sumire's lover.
Sputnik Sweetheart is a melancholy love story, and its deceptively... see complete book description

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  • Ben H

    ben h says

    What I most enjoyed was the Ferris Wheel. I also loved the section set in Greece, having live on a Greek island one summer.

    posted Saturday, May 31 2008

  • Aki

    aki says

    Nah, don't feel stupid. I think it was meant to be that way; meant to leave us all astounded, with a big, big hole in our hearts. I loved it, anyway. ^__^

    posted Friday, May 30 2008

    (This is a response to a previous comment)

  • Aki

    aki says

    Actually, I've been drowning in delirious pleasure all throughout the time I've been reading the book, but it was the last paragraph that killed me. It left so many unanswered questions, and all I could do was to speculate. I could speculate all I want, but there's this nagging feeling that the book knows something that I'll never know. The book one-upped me, and I loved it. It's the magic of the book. It stole something from me, something it will never return, and all I could do was to close the book and wondered what happened after the last word.

    posted Friday, May 30 2008

    (This is a response to a previous comment)

  • shih tzu fan

    shih tzu fan says

    yah, what's the blood all about?

    posted Sunday, March 23 2008

  • Cindi

    cindi says

    That last paragraph got me too! It made me feel stupid cause I didn't get it straight away. (Even now I'm not too sure!) I kind of knew it was related to the earlier bit about blood but was too lazy to hunt that exact line down. Now I've returned the book and will never know..

    posted Monday, September 24 2007

  • cathio

    cathio says

    The last paragraph sort of slapped me around. What is the blood from? Still musing over that one. Did he kill her? Figuratively, in his mind? Is that closure?

    posted Thursday, September 20 2007

  • mat82

    mat82 says

    the narrative is superb

    posted Monday, August 27 2007

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