Haruki Murakami fans rejoice as landmark new book goes on sale in Japan
- Haruki Murakami‘s new novel, The Tale of KAHO, was released in Japan on Friday, with enthusiastic fans attending a midnight countdown event at a major Tokyo bookstore.
- The novel is notable as Murakami’s first full-length work to feature a lone female protagonist, Kaho, a picture book author who experiences bizarre events after a particularly rude blind date.
- Murakami stated he wrote the novel by putting himself in Kaho’s shoes, a departure from his usual young or middle-aged male protagonists, which has generated significant interest among his fans.
- The Tale of KAHO originated as a short story rehearsed at a university event and was subsequently expanded through a series of four stories published in Shincho magazine, now compiled into a 352-page novel.
- The novel is currently available exclusively in Japanese, with no plans for an English translation disclosed, following his previous novel, The City and Its Uncertain Walls, released three years prior.
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