Japan’s Haruki Murakami to publish first new novel in 3 years
TOKYO — A new book by Haruki Murakami will mark the first time a full-length novel by the Japanese author features a female main character and her pursuit of finding a way out of a bizarre world.
“The Tale of KAHO,” which is scheduled to be released July 3 in print and digital formats, centers on a 26-year-old picture book author named Kaho.
The new novel is Murakami’s first in three years. His previous novel, “The City and Its Uncertain Walls,” is a story of a male protagonist searching for love, loss and the boundaries between real and subconscious worlds.
Kaho is the first lone, woman protagonist featured in a full-length novel by Murakami, Shinchosha Publishing Co. said Thursday in a statement.
Initially, the novel started as a short story titled, “Kaho,” which Murakami rehearsed at a book reading event two years ago at Waseda University, his alma mater in Tokyo, with Mieko Kawakami, a renowned female author and fan of his work. The story was published in the June 2024 edition of the monthly Shincho magazine.
The character Kaho, who has average looks and intelligence, is a curious person. One day she dines with a man who tells her, “I’ve never seen one as ugly as you.” Not outraged but baffled, curious Kaho tries to find out his hidden message.
Soon she starts encountering bizarre things in her life.
“I must find the way out of this world,” a brief promotional teaser released by the publisher says. “Murakami world is in full force.”
Murakami has since released three subsequent “Kaho” series stories in Shincho magazine, most recently in the March edition. They include “The Anteater of Musashi-sakai,“ “Kaho and the Termite Queen” and “Kaho and the Motorcycle Man, and Scarlett Johansson.”
The English version of the first piece, translated by Philip Gabriel, was published in The New Yorker magazine in 2024.
Murakami brings the four parts together and gives them new life in the 352-page new novel, the publisher said.
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