Blowing away Covid blues
Japanese author looks for silver lining in optimistic radio show
Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami, hosting a special radio show from home, painted a brighter side of the world with his favourite music, and said the fight against the coronavirus is a challenge in figuring out ways to help and care for each other.
The 71-year-old, known for bestsellers such as A Wild Sheep Chase and Windup Bird Chronicle, said he hoped the show would “blow away some of the corona-related blues”.
Murakami opened the two-hour late night show Murakami Radio Stay Home Special with Look for the Silver Lining by the Modern Folk Quartet, followed by 18 other songs, selected from classical to jazz, pop and rock. Their common thread: smile, sunshine, rainbow, birthday memories and other happy sides of life.
Murakami said comparing the fight against the coronavirus to a war, as politicians often do, is inappropriate. “It’s a challenge for us to figure out how we can share our wisdom to cooperate, help each other and keep balance. It’s not a war to kill each other, but a fight of wisdom to let us all live,” he said. “We don’t need enmity and hatred here.”
Music serves as an important motif in Murakami’s stories. An avid listener and collector of music, he has also written books on the topic and has a library of records in his study, where his programme was prerecorded.
Murakami has hosted Murakami Radio every two months since August 2018 on Tokyo FM. The station said his latest show was Murakami’s idea to cheer up those who are under stress, living under a coronavirus state of emergency still in place in parts of Japan, including Tokyo.
Murakami began writing while running a jazz bar in Tokyo after graduating from university.
Following his 1979 debut novel Hear the Wind Sing, the 1987 romance Norwegian Wood became his first bestseller, establishing him as a young literary star. Recent hits include 1Q84 and Killing Commendatore.
A perennial contender for the Nobel Prize in literature and a social recluse, Murakami has worked from home for years and said his lifestyle has changed little, though “the corona situation” had affected him in many ways, possibly as inspiration for his future work. He has written stories inspired by events that have shaken the society, including the 1995 Tokyo subway gassing by an apocalyptic cult and the deadly quake in Kobe, where he grew up.
Rather than documenting an event as it develops, Murakami said that as a novelist he was more interested in transforming it into “a story in a different form,” though he doesn’t know when or how. The world might be experiencing “a large-scale social experiment whose results could slowly spread across the entire society, for better or worse”.
Murakami said he worries the postcorona world may be a more closed and selfish place even if it has better protection. “If love and compassion are lacking, the world after the corona will surely be an edgy and insipid place even if masks and vaccines are abundantly distributed,” he said.
“Love is important.”
It’s not a war to kill each other, but a fight of wisdom to let us all live.
Haruki Murakami