Men Without Women
Stories
- Published: 9 May 2017
- ISBN: 9781473547308
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 240
Murakami writes of complex things with his usual beguiling simplicity. . . Strangely invigorating to read. . . It is Murakami at his whimsical, romantic best
Financial Times
Self-schooled and uncontaminated by writerly edicts, the 68-year-old presents subjects directly on a platter before the reader. . . but stirs up all kinds of themes and truths in the allegorical mud through his gentle, almost conversational style
Hilary A White, Irish Independent
Supremely enjoyable, philosophical and pitch-perfect new collection of short stories. . . Murakami has a marvellous understanding of youth and age - and the failings of each
Observer
Calculatedly provocative. . ., the stories offer sweet-sour meditations on human solitude and a yearning to connect. . . Murakami, always inventive, is one of the finest popular writers at work today
Ian Thomson, Evening Standard
One of the finest pieces of short-form writing I have enjoyed in many years… If the familiar way of Haruki Murakami are an enthusiasm, there is plenty here to divert the aficionado, but he also takes a turn into riskier territory that could well coax new readers into his distinctive world
Keith Bruce, Herald
A man who starves to death for love, a woman who claims she used to be a lamprey eel, a mysterious whiskey drinker who scares away gangsters – it is the secondary characters who truly come alive in these tales. Peppered with strange women and passive men, unexpected suicides and cats, these vignettes will leave readers questioning, and linger in the mind
India Stoughton
Elegant. . . Vintage Murakami. . . A glimpse into the strange worlds people invent by the always inventive Murakami
Kirkus
Written with all the cats, spaghetti, humor, and gentle surrealism we might expect . . . Men Without Women is a funny, lovely, unmistakably Murakami collection of seven stories about the lives of people trying to find their place in the world and reckoning with their pasts
Buzzfeed
A subtle, always interesting collection
Anthony Gardner, Mail on Sunday
A collection like Men Without Women [restores] my faith...in how utterly perfect [short stories] can be... each of the seven stories here… a gem in and of its own right, but strung together they’re a sparkling strand of precious stones, the light refracted from each equally brilliant but the tones varying subtly.
Independent
Astonishing
Grazia
A solid collection and a decent entry point to Murakami with a crisp take on love that should please fans
Liverpool Echo
It’s a rather delightful foray into the surreal
Lucy Scholes, Belfast Telegraph Morning
Murakami still has something to say… A solid collection, this is a decent entry point to Murakami and should please fans
Keeley Bolger, UK Press Syndication
Marked by the same wry humour that has defined his work, in this collection Murakami has crafted another contemporary classic
Week
Just as Hemingway’s tales of bullfighters, boxers and soldiers were fit for men living in the turbulent world of the 1920s, Murakami’s speak to the confusion and loneliness felt by many living in 2017
Gareth Rees, AskMenUK
Gorgeously crafted… If you like Murakami and his usual shtick… you will find much to enjoy, and much that surprises you, here
iNews
Moments of melancholy and humour mix with acute observation in the latest offering by Japan’s master storyteller
Angel Gurría-Quintana, Financial Times
Haruki Murakami is a master of the open-ended mystery… Drawn to the abiding strangeness and unfathomability of life. His meandering, mesmerising tales of profound alienation are driven by puzzling circumstances that neither his characters not readers can crack
Heller McAlpin, Washington Post
The dreamlike quality of the stories in Men Without Women is undoubtedly one of its chief attractions… Murakami’s womenless men live in perpetual daydreams, a state of mind often prompted by a loss of some kind… Murakami’s latest is a hypnotising study of male loneliness
Brad Davies, Independent
These elegant stories are poignant and inventive
Mail on Sunday
A disconcertingly funny portrait of modern loneliness
Hayley Maitland, Vogue
It’s easy to forget… what a masterful writer he is... The interplay of sadness and heartache with moments of humour and surrealness are what make him the writer he is… Subtle, playful and nuanced. It is a subversive, almost existential look at relationships between men and women, one that plays with and even does away with the toxic masculinity of Hemingway’s work
Nikesh Shukla
This scrutiny of both misogyny and the loss of male virility is delicately handled by Murakami, who manages to bring just enough of the surreal into the story without drawing too much attention to itself or indeed what it is he is trying to do. This is the magic of Murakami… Murakami’s prose throughout is, unsurprisingly, beautiful. He writes with his signature stripped down sparsity that nonetheless never loses warmth of becomes too conspicuous. His dialogue is natural and believable and he has truly mastered the ability to write simply about complex and nuanced themes
Nicholas Tufnell, Dante Magazine
I was blown away by the sense of loneliness, longing and yearning in each story
Carol Drinkwater, Yours
Marked by the same dry humour that has defined his entire body of work, in this collection Murakami has crafted another contemporary classic.
Asian Art Newspaper
A book of piercing stories. Murakami writes in a calm, clear way, and suddenly you’re very moved
i
Each story is centred around the concept of longing or loneliness, and all told with Murakami's unique and illuminating style. One for long-serving fans and newcomers alike
Esquire