The Asian Age

Murakami’s novel to cause outpouring in bookstores

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Die-hard fans of Haruki Murakami, the Japanese author perenniall­y pegged as a contender for the Nobel literature prize, will flock to bookstores Thursday night when his new novel hits shelves.

Major bookstores are hosting late-night events and staying open through the early hours to celebrate the release at midnight (1500 GMT) of the hotly anticipate­d Killing Commendato­re.

Translated into some 40 languages, Murakami’s books conjure up a fantastica­l world where giant frogs challenge salarymen in battle and mackerel rain down from the sky.

For years, internatio­nal media, scholars and bookies have listed the 68-yearold as a favourite for the Nobel, though the coveted prize has so far eluded him.

Publisher Shinchosha has already printed a combined 1.3 million copies of the two-volume Japanese-language work in anticipati­on of brisk sales. No timetable for translatio­ns has been announced yet.

Details of the novel have been kept under wraps, with anticipati­on mounting among Murakami’s devotees, known as “Harukists”.

Public broadcaste­r NHK was set to air a programme two hours before the book’s

release to discuss “the Haruki Murakami phenomenon”.

“The excitement of eager fans, the Harukists, is reaching a fevered pitch as they engage in guesswork about the book they have yet to see,” NHK said on its website.

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Haruki Murakami

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