Norwegian Wood

Haruki Murakami

Pages

296

Year

1987

Difficulty

Easy

Themes

love, loss, coming of age, memory, loneliness

Norwegian Wood is the novel that made Murakami a household name in Japan, selling millions of copies within months of publication. It is also the most conventional thing he has ever written, and that is precisely why it works as a starting point.

Why Start Here

The story follows Toru Watanabe, a college student in late-1960s Tokyo, as he navigates his feelings for two very different women: Naoko, who is beautiful, fragile, and connected to a shared tragedy, and Midori, who is vibrant, funny, and relentlessly alive. The novel is told as a memory, triggered by hearing the Beatles song that gives it its title, and that backward-looking quality gives everything a particular tenderness.

Unlike Murakami’s more fantastical novels, there are no surreal elements here. No parallel worlds, no talking animals, no mysterious wells. What you get instead is a deeply felt story about what it means to be young and uncertain, to love someone you cannot save, and to figure out how to keep living after loss. The prose is clean and unshowy, the emotions are enormous, and the pacing lets you settle into Toru’s world completely.

At 296 pages, it is a comfortable read that introduces Murakami’s voice, his obsession with music, his melancholy sense of humor, and his ability to make loneliness feel like a shared experience rather than an isolating one.

What to Expect

A realistic, emotionally intense coming-of-age novel set against the backdrop of 1960s Tokyo student life. Beautiful prose that reads quickly. A story about grief, desire, and the difficulty of choosing between two kinds of love. Some readers find the ending devastating. Others find it quietly hopeful. Both responses are right.

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