Kafka on the Shore marks another critical and popular success for Murakami. The familiar themes of isolation, reality versus fantasy, and the connection between past and present are handled with Murakami's trademark humor. The myth of Oedipus is thrown in along with a cast of supporting characters that includes an old man who talks to cats, a female hemophiliac who lives as a gay man, and two World War II soldiers trapped in time. Murakami's intention was to write a story about a boy who escapes his dangerous father and goes in search of his long-lost mother. The story is rich in references to music and Western culture, dreamy scenarios that expose the spooky underbelly of ordinary life, utterly unadorned language, and elements of magical realism that challenge the reader's grasp of reality. For the most part, though, Kafka on the Shore is classic Murakami. While most of Murakami's protagonists are thirty-something men who favor isolation and have unremarkable histories with women, the main character in this novel is a fifteen-year-old runaway. Kafka on the Shore (2005), Haruki Murakami's tenth novel, marks a slight departure from his previous work.
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