Haruki Murakami und der Rhythmus des Schreibens

Ich zeige diese Woche, wie man beim Schreiben in den Rhythmus und damit in den Flow kommt. Dazu habe ich einen «Taktgeber» gebaut.
https://www.matthiaszehnder.ch/wochenkommentar/haruki-murakami-und-der-rhythmus-des-schreibens/
#Flow #HarukiMurakami #KünstlicheIntelligenz #Schreiben #Kreativität

Libro “La ciudad y sus muros inciertos de Haruki Murakami”

  • Título original: 街とその不確かな壁 (Machi to sono futashika na kabe)
  • Título en español: La ciudad y sus muros inciertos [1]
  • Calificación edad: 16: Recomendada para mayores de 16 años. Aunque no contiene escenas de violencia explícita, aborda la pérdida, crisis existenciales profundas, la madurez emocional y complejas metáforas psicológicas que requieren cierta madurez lectora.
  • Autor: Haruki Murakami [2]
  • País: Japón
  • Idioma original: Japonés
  • Género: Novela, Realismo mágico, Ficción contemporánea
  • Calificación calidad: 7 a 8: Muy buena. El consenso de la crítica y los lectores en plataformas como Casa del Libro celebra el regreso de Murakami a su atmósfera más pura y onírica, consolidándose como una lectura imprescindible para sus seguidores habituales, aunque para algunos lectores la transición entre sus tramas pueda sentirse un poco pausada.
  • Argumento y comentario:

Es la historía de un hombre, que en su adolescencia, con diecisiete años, se enamora locamente de una joven que asegura que su “verdadero yo” se encuentra en una ciudad misteriosa amurallada. Tras la desaparición repentina de su amada, el protagonista pasa décadas atrapada por ese recuerdo hasta que, de adulto, lograr cruzar la frontera de lo real y introducirse a esa misteriosa ciudad desprovista del tiempo, donde trabaja extrayendo viejos sueños en una biblioteca.



Comentario: Obra muy nostálgica que funciona como un laberinto emocional. Murakami reescribe una idea que le obsesionó durante cuarenta años para explorar de manera brillante la frontera entre los sueños y la vigilia, la pérdida de la identidad y la inevitable melancolía del paso del tiempo. [3]

FUENTES


[1] https://www.fnac.es

[2] https://www.casadellibro.com

[3] https://www.planetadelibros.com

#HarukiMurakami #LaCiudadYSusMurosInciertos #LecturasRecomendadas #LibrosDe2024 #literaturaJaponesa #realismoMágico #TusquetsEditores
Crítica: Sauce ciego, mujer dormida (Saules Aveugles Femme Endormie)

Varios relatos de Haruki Murakami se fusionan en una experiencia animada que convierte la melancolía, el absurdo y la incertidumbre existencial en imágenes hipnóticas y surrealistas.

Rolling Stone en Español

Haruki Murakami's upcoming "The Tale of Kaho" will be released this summer in Japanese (the English version won't be out until next year). Fans are looking forward to another game of Murakami bingo — cross off if you spot an empty well, missing cat or erotic ear. Thomas Caffrey writes for @TheConversationUS about why repetition isn't always a flaw, and how this book is likely to differ from Murakami's past 15 novels.

https://flip.it/OT8WqA

#HarukiMurakami #Literature #Writing

Haruki Murakami has a new book coming out and fans know what to expect – for the most part

Such is the writer’s love of repetition that a game of Murakami bingo resurfaces every time he publishes a new book.

The Conversation

#FestaChallenge2026 2025 #BTS

Happy Festa everyone !!

2025 seems like two minutes ago. Everyone finished Military Service, but Jin was touring. So my best memory was them all messing about on the beach in LA - they should always be where the desert means the sea "Wherever there's hope there's a trial" #harukimurakami #sea #keepswimming #bulletproof

I arrange my thoughts

[A]s I write I think about all sorts of things. I don’t necessarily write down what I’m thinking; It’s just that as I write I think about things. As I write, I arrange my thoughts. And rewriting and revising takes my thinking down even deeper paths. No matter how much I write, though, I never reach a conclusion. And no matter how much I rewrite, I never reach the destination. Even after decades of writing, the same still holds true.

~ Haruki Murakami

slip:4a1331.

#7ForSunday #HarukiMurakami #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed #OnWriting #Quotes
Craig Constantine

Presence, not pursuit.

Craig Constantine

Exerting yourself

Most runners run not because they want to live longer, but because they want to live life to the fullest. If you’re going to while away the years, it’s far better to live them with clear goals and fully alive than in a fog, and I believe running helps you do that. Exerting yourself to the fullest within your individual limits: That’s the essence of running, and a metaphor for life—and for me, for writing as well. I believe many runners would agree.

~ Haruki Murakami

slip:4a1311.

#7ForSunday #HarukiMurakami #OnWriting #Quotes #Running
Craig Constantine

Presence, not pursuit.

Craig Constantine

Prioritize

I’m struck by how, except when you’re young, you really need to prioritize in life, figuring out in what order you should divide up your time and energy. If you don’t get that sort of system set by a certain age, you’ll lack focus and your life will be out of balance.

~ Haruki Murakami

slip:4a1301.

#HarukiMurakami #LifeBalance #Quotes #Systems
Craig Constantine

Presence, not pursuit.

Craig Constantine

I am not a runner

I’m lately fascinated by the distinction between when I’m using an activity as a part of my identity (“I am a runner”) versus pointing out that I do an activity (“I run”). This sort of nit matters to me, because the nature of self-identity matters to me. If I am a runner, but then for whatever reason I don’t run… what then am I? What fascinates me isn’t the specific verbs, but rather: What actually am I? This locks me up thinking for long periods. I write. I run. I climb. I jump. Yes, but, what am I?

I look up at the sky, wondering if I’ll catch a glimpse of kindness there, but I don’t. All I see are indifferent summer clouds drifting over the Pacific. And they have nothing to say to me. Clouds are always taciturn. I probably shouldn’t be looking up at them. What I should be looking at is inside of me. Like staring down into a deep well. Can I see kindness there? No, all I see is my own nature.

~ Haruki Murakami from, What I Talk About When I Talk About Running

I enjoyed reading Murakami’s essays. Particularly because I run poorly, I wanted to know what he talks about when he talks about running. In fact, he does talk a great deal about literally running, in addition to the larger perspectives on his life for which everyone loves the book.

But one thing is for sure: I run. But I am not a runner.

ɕ

#7ForSunday #HarukiMurakami #Identity #Running