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South of the Border, West of the Sun
Haruki Murakami Book Review

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Plot Summary of South of the Border, West of the Sun
"The simple touching story of the loves of Hajime. Hajime an only child befriends another only child Shimamoto who has a lame leg. At the age of 12 they have an innocent love spent listening to records in Shimamoto's living room. Their love culminates when Shimamoto grabs Hajime's hand fleetingly for 10 seconds sparking a love that will last their entire lives. Unfortunately shortly afterwards Hajime moves away and they drift apart. The story continues with Hajime's tender adolescent relationship with Izumi who he ruins forever by having a passionate sexual affair with her older cousin behind her back. Hajime then limps through his twenties lonely and bored working in an educational publishers firm. Finally he meets and falls in love with Yukiko. They marry and together they have two small girls. Hajime becomes the successful owner of two jazz clubs. Into this idyllic life one day, 25 years after they last saw eachother, walks the beautiful and mysterious Shimamoto. Hajime is catapulted into the past risking all that he has built in the present. A beautiful thought provoking novel on the complexities of love."
John Marcel, Resident Scholar

"Hajime, a bar owner in Tokyo, recounts his life since his birth until the recent day he reunited with Shimamoto - his old sweetheart from elementary school, then a polio-stricken cripple. Frustrated at having been separated from her at an early age, he had been in multiple relationships broken by his own desires translated into selfishness. He seemed to finally find a stable married life with Yukiko, daughter of a rich industrialist, who gave him two daughters as well as dad's backing to open a bar. But now, with Shimamoto standing before him, no longer a cripple but transformed into a raving, alluring beauty, he must face the choice of staying with his current life or throwing it all away to achieve his lifelong dream of real love from the only woman he could trust...

The book describes many moving parts, including growing pains, psychological limitations, parenthood, and most importantly, the importance of both romantic love and sexual relations in the man-woman relationship. I recommend it."

Sergio Mendoza, Resident Scholar

"Hajime (which means "beginning") was born in 1951. An unusual only child and a loner in elementary school, he gravitated to Shimamoto, a girl with a bad leg and a limp from polio. They became very close friends but circumstances separated them at age 12. Hajime drifts through relationships and a boring editing job in his 20s, then marries Yukiko and opens a pair of jazz bars with the financial backing of her contractor father. He has a good life -- plenty of money and two small daughters -- when Shimamoto drifts mysteriously back into his life: gorgeous, wealthy, and nearly whole following surgery. Both torn by deep passion and wanting to do the right thing, Hajime and Shimamoto dance delicately around their past, their tender feelings, her secrets, his emotional inaccessibility. In contrast to his trickier, complexly plotted novels (e.g., _The Wild Sheep Chase_, _The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle_), this short Harukami tale -- first published in Japan in 1992 and translated into English in 1998 -- is deceptively simple on the surface, but has rich emotional depths. It's a wise and beautiful "romance novel" for thinking adults -- especially men! The title takes its first half from a Nat King Cole song, its second half from the phenomenon where Siberian farmers are driven mad by the endlessly flat arctic wastes and just start walking steadily west, abandoning their lives and farms -- symbolizing, perhaps, the poles between the grass-is-greener dreaming and aching boredom/hysteria of existence."
David Loftus, Resident Scholar

Review Analysis of South of the Border, West of the Sun
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Ratings are on a 1-10 scale (Low to High)
Plot
Tone of book? - thoughtful
Time/era of story - 1980's-1999
Romance/Romance Problems Yes
Kind of romance: - GENERAL--no other subplots apply - seduction (yum!) - playing footsy while inconveniently married - rekindling lost love/marriage
Inside culture (main char) - Japanese
Kind of sex: - incest
Is this an adult or child's book? - Adult or Young Adult Book
Outside culture (society) - Japanese
Ethnic/regional/gender life Yes
Taboo sex story? Yes

Main Character
Gender - Male
Profession/status: - small businessman
Age: - 20's-30's
Is this an ordinary person caught up in events? Yes
Ethnicity/Nationality - Japanese
How sensitive is this character? - sensitive to others' feelings
Sense of humor - Mostly serious with occasional humor
Intelligence - Average intelligence
Physique - very athletic

Main Adversary
Identity: - Female
Age: - 20's-30's
Profession/status: - unemployed
How much of work is main antagonist actually present in: - a substantial amount
How sensitive is this character? - sensitive to others' feelings
Sense of humor - Mostly serious with occasional humor
Intelligence - Average intelligence

Setting
How much descriptions of surroundings? - 5 (an average amount)
Asia/Pacific Yes
Asian country: - Japan
Forest? Yes
City? Yes

Style
Person - mostly 1st
Accounts of torture and death? - no torture/death
Sex in book? Yes
What kind of sex: - descript of kissing - touching of anatomy - licking - actual description of hetero sex - descript. of female anat. (the big B's) - descript. of female anat. (the big V) - descript. of nude males (the big P)
Amount of dialog - roughly even amounts of descript and dialog
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Haruki Murakami Resident Scholar Profiles

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David G. Phillips  

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