
Novelist as a Vocation
4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars | 851 ratings
Price: 18
Last update: 01-31-2025
About this item
NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLER An insightful look into the mind of a master storyteller—and a unique look at the craft of writing from the beloved and best-selling author of 1Q84, Norwegian Wood, and What I Talk About When I Talk About Running.
"Murakami is like a magician who explains what he's doing as he performs the trick and still makes you believe he has supernatural powers"—New York Times Book Review
A MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK: Esquire, Vulture, LitHub, New York Observer
Aspiring writers and readers who have long wondered where the mysterious novelist gets his ideas and what inspires his strangely surreal worlds will be fascinated by this engaging book from the internationally best-selling author. Haruki Murakami now shares with audiences his thoughts on the role of the novel in our society; his own origins as a writer; and his musings on the sparks of creativity that inspire other writers, artists, and musicians.
Here are the personal details of a life devoted to craft: the initial moment at a Yakult Swallows baseball game, when he suddenly knew he could write a novel; the importance of memory, what he calls a writer’s “mental chest of drawers”; the necessity of loneliness, patience, and his daily running routine; the seminal role a carrier pigeon played in his career and more.
"What I want to say is that in a certain sense, while the novelist is creating a novel, he is simultaneously being created by the novel as well."—Haruki Murakami
Top reviews from the United States

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Volume on Writing
It was published in Japanese in 2015, and its English translation took a few years. It was worth the wait, and as any novelist or writer can benefit from Murakami's work. He offers insight on how he became a novelist and the path that he took along the past three and a half decades. It offers insight on how he dealt with criticism, the importance of exercise for his career, and how his work progresses. Excellent volume for anyone interested in being an author or being successful at a career.

4.0 out of 5 stars Haruki Murakami's musings on the art of writing fiction.
Murakami talks in all honesty about himself and at one point he succinctly describes his own character and general attitude as this: "I am just too much an individualist. I'm a person with a fixed vision and a fixed process for giving that vision shape". Moreover, later he mentions that he faces great difficulties when he is called to assess the work of other writers as his personal criteria are almost impossible to be repressed even if the situation demands it. Novelist as a Vocation contains for the most part, the Japanese wordsmith's recollections from various stages of his career, starting in 1979 with the publication of his first novella under the title Hear the Wind Sing and carrying on for 30 years. There is a great deal of introspection and self-reflection involved in the text while the readers who are familiar with Murakami's oeuvre will be able to discern some character traits which manifest themselves in his austere prose and creation of stories that clad the trite and mundane with a talismanic quality. Added to the above, the author displays an inclination for self-deprecation, materializing in short sentences interspersed here and there such as this one: "I doubt that if I didn't write novels, anyone would even have noticed me". Of course this is a comment that would be immediately rebuffed by Murakami's loyal readership who consider him one of the literary geniuses of the twentieth century. His humble remarks come across as sincere and there is nothing to indicate that he wants to manipulate, by any means, the reader in order to elicit false sympathy.
Novelist as a Vocation is a collection of eleven essays which Murakami began writing circa 2010 and was published in Japan in 2015, leaving a 7-year gap until the English translation, an immaculate work by the duo of Philip Gabriel and Ted Goossen, raising questions concerning the reasons for this long delay. The first six essays were originally published in the monthly issued Japanese magazine "Monkey" while the remaining five succeeding them were written especially for this book. Each one of them treads on different aspects of the literary process, including sections on the significance of literary prizes, the concept of originality in literature and art in general, advices on how to craft plausible characters through the sheer powers of observation, while there are also chapters where the author ruminates about educational practices as exercised in his native country. As it always happens in collections, not all essays are of equal significance with the most controversial one being, without a shadow of a doubt, the first one ("Are Novelists Broad-Minded?") where Murakami opts to talk about novelists, not novels as they are "too abstract and amorphous a subject", and makes a series of stereotypical aphorisms concerning certain characteristics shared by most authors lacking depth and doing a disservice to the book as a whole. For example, I wouldn't expect to read in a text written by Murakami that friendship between two writers is almost impossible to be achieved due to their idiosyncratic disposition and inflated egoism, even if he attempts to support his claims by employing an anecdotal paradigm featuring Marcel Proust and James Joyce as the protagonists.
I found the essay on literary prizes to be especially interesting as there is a prevalent assumption suggesting that Murakami is a recluse due to his systematic negation to make public appearances, give interviews, or attend to literary prize awards. The most recent example of this kind of behavior was in 2018 when the Japanese authorial guru asked to be excluded as a nominee for the New Academy Prize in Literature, an alternative to the Nobel Prize in Literature. Murakami said that he preferred to concentrate on his craft, staying away from the limelight. His elevated sense of commitment and exemplary discipline in his life is analyzed in chapter titled "A Completely Personal and Physical Occupation" in which he ponders about writing as the par excellence solitary practice, arguing that this is a vocation that in order to be sustained the author has to adhere to some basic rules regarding his lifestyle. Murakami himself is a man obsessed with several things such as jazz, before he began his writing career he was an owner of a jazz bar in Tokyo, and baseball though his number one passion is fitness. He seems to detect a correlation between physical and mental health, claiming that "as physical strength declines (...) there is a subtle decline in mental fitness too". The proper response to the aforementioned danger is to engage in systematic exercise, whether it is running, Murakami's preferred type of physical activity, aerobics or else. The desire for optimal performance in writing a work of fiction dictates a tight quotidian schedule that entails 5-6 hours devoted to the actual writing and at least one hour of outdoors physical activity.
I also found the chapter on the concept and perception of "originality" to be particularly illuminating as the author draws definitions from various sources, such as Oliver Sack's interpretation of the term as presented in his book An Anthropologist on Mars with which the essay begins, and continuing his analysis to illustrate the affinity of the two concepts of "originality" and "classic" as perceived by the majority of people. Murakami also cites many examples of ingenious creators from a variety of artistic fields, the musicians Igor Stravinsky and Thelonious Monk, and authors of Ernest Hemingway's stature whose work had not been thoroughly appreciated during the span of their lives. Resilience to the passage of time is the number one criterion by which originality is ascribed to the work of an artist. The author summarizes 3 basic requirements that have to be fulfilled for an artist to be deemed as "original": first of all, he must have a distinctive style whose uniqueness ought to be immediately perceivable by the audience. Second, "that style must have the power to update itself (...) since it expresses an internal and spontaneous process of self-reinvention", and finally that style should also "become integrated within the psyche of the audience". Murakami's fans should also delve into the chapter on crafting characters where the author gives the most solid of advices regarding proper characterization: observe those around you as closely as possible: "in the same way that you have to read a lot of books in order to write novels, to write about people you need to know a lot of them". Read and observe are the two cardinal principles lying at the heart of the literary process.
This is certainly a book that will greatly appeal to Murakami's aficionados, but will disappoint those who seek concrete instructions regarding the art of writing a novel. However, there are several other books fitting the bill (you can take a look at my list on writing reference books here) and there are also a multitude of writing courses, some of them offered online, that can educate a prospective author. Novelist as a Vocation is Murakami's take on the subject and aspires nothing more than conveying the author's ideas and conclusions that he reached throughout the course of a 30-year writing career.

5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful Memoir

5.0 out of 5 stars About the Joy of Being a Writer
~ Pg. 35
I loved this book. It is going to be one of my go-to craft books to gift my writer friends, alongside Matthew Salesses’s book Craft in the Real World.
What I loved about Novelist as a Vocation is the enthusiasm with which Haruki Murakami describes his writing process. There is no exaggeration of the difficulty level he finds in the work. There is almost a sense of joy about how he looks forward to showing up for his work, and it is the high point of his day. In many craft books, I often find an off-putting tone of toiling, and writer’s block, and blah-blah, like the writer, is doing the world a favor by being a writer, but with Murakami, that is not the tone.
Here is a highly accomplished writer who enjoys writing. He is in this job because first and foremost, he enjoys this line of work. I also loved reading about how he connects the dots between mind and body.
His thoughts on finding success in the USA publishing industry are also awe-inspiring. At the age of forty, he resumed the attitude of a newcomer when he started his publishing journey in the USA.
Murakami is an unparalleled master of the literary world, but he is also a hardworking craftsman who believes in being present, physically, and mentally, and that is so inspiring.

3.0 out of 5 stars Not what you’d expect
Read it if you are a hard core Murakami fan and want to know about him as a person. Can avoid otherwise.
