What We Are Reading Today: ‘First Person Singular’

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Updated 18 October 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘First Person Singular’

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  • The beauty of “First Person Singular” lies in its simplicity. Murakami’s prose, which is often elusive and dreamlike, is refreshingly accessible in these stories

Author: Haruki Murakami

Haruki Murakami’s “First Person Singular,” first published in 2020, is a remarkable collection of eight short stories, each narrated in the first person, offering readers a deep dive into the intricacies of human memory, identity, and the blurred lines between reality and imagination.

As is the case with much of Murakami’s work, the stories are imbued with magical realism, the exploration of loneliness, and existential pondering.

In this collection, there is also a marked intimacy; the narratives explore personal experiences and reflections that often feel like confessions.

The beauty of “First Person Singular” lies in its simplicity. Murakami’s prose, which is often elusive and dreamlike, is refreshingly accessible in these stories.

The minimalist style allows the weight of the themes to come to the forefront — themes of love, aging, and the passage of time are ever-present, hovering like ghosts in the margins of each tale.

In “Cream,” for instance, a seemingly mundane memory transforms into an abstract meditation on the fleeting nature of time and life’s inexplicable mysteries.

Similarly, “Charlie Parker Plays Bossa Nova” reflects Murakami’s fascination with music as a metaphysical gateway, blending jazz and surrealism into a meditation on alternate realities.

Murakami’s exploration of identity and self-perception is particularly poignant in the titular story, in which the narrator reflects on his younger self, weaving together memory and fiction, and questioning the veracity of his own recollections.

This theme of unreliable memory runs throughout the collection, giving readers the sense that each story is a fragment of a larger, perhaps unknowable, truth.

As is often the case in Murakami’s world, the stories do not offer clear resolutions; instead, they leave us with more questions.

What sets “First Person Singular” apart from Murakami’s previous works is its raw, personal tone. While his novels often immerse readers in vast, surreal worlds, these stories are more grounded, more reflective of the mundane aspects of life, although still tinged with the fantastical.

The first-person narrative technique further amplifies this sense of closeness, as though the reader is being granted access to Murakami’s private musings.

At the heart of the collection is a sense of nostalgia — an awareness of time slipping away, of experiences that cannot be reclaimed, and of the inevitable loneliness that accompanies the human condition. Yet, there is also a quiet acceptance, a resignation that life, in all its absurdity and beauty, cannot always be understood, only lived.

“First Person Singular” is a profound and thought-provoking addition to Murakami’s body of work. It is a collection that resonates deeply, not for its grand revelations, but for its quiet examination of the personal, the intimate, and the mysterious.

Fans of Murakami will appreciate the familiar themes and style, while new readers will find this an accessible entry point into his work.

Ultimately, “First Person Singular” is a meditation on what it means to be human, told with the grace and subtle complexity that only Murakami can deliver.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Birds at Rest’ by Roger Pasquier

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Birds at Rest’ by Roger Pasquier
Updated 2 min 44 sec ago
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Birds at Rest’ by Roger Pasquier

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Birds at Rest’ by Roger Pasquier

“Birds at Rest” is the first book to give a full picture of how birds rest, roost, and sleep, a vital part of their lives.

It features new science that can measure what is happening in a bird’s brain over the course of a night or when it has flown to another hemisphere, as well as still-valuable observations by legendary naturalists such as John James Audubon, Alfred Russel Wallace, and Theodore Roosevelt. Much of what they saw and what ornithologists are studying today can be observed and enjoyed by any birder.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘A Dynamical Systems Theory of Thermodynamics’

What We Are Reading Today: ‘A Dynamical Systems Theory of Thermodynamics’
Updated 17 December 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘A Dynamical Systems Theory of Thermodynamics’

What We Are Reading Today: ‘A Dynamical Systems Theory of Thermodynamics’

Author: Wassim M. Haddad 

“A Dynamical Systems Theory of Thermodynamics” develops a postmodern theory of thermodynamics as part of mathematical dynamical systems theory. 

This book merges the two universalisms of thermodynamics and dynamical systems theory in a single compendium, with the latter providing an ideal language for the former, to develop a new and unique framework for dynamical thermodynamics.

In particular, the book uses system-theoretic ideas to bring coherence, clarity, and precision to an important and poorly understood classical area of science.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘What Insects Do, and Why’

What We Are Reading Today: ‘What Insects Do, and Why’
Updated 16 December 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘What Insects Do, and Why’

What We Are Reading Today: ‘What Insects Do, and Why’

Author: Ross Piper

“What Insects Do, and Why” takes you on an unforgettable tour of the insect world, presenting these amazing creatures as you have never seen them before. 

This stunningly illustrated guide explores how insects live, ranging from elegant displays of courtship to brutal acts of predation, and provides insights into the marvelous diversity of insects all around us.

Along the way, Ross Piper discusses insect evolution, reproduction and life cycles, feeding strategies, defenses, sociality, parasite-host interactions, human impacts on insects, and more.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Brainjacking’

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Updated 15 December 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Brainjacking’

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  • The book examines how techniques such as storytelling, advertising and political strategies are used to inform, influence, and manipulate people

Author: Brian Clegg

The 2024 book “Brainjacking: The Science of Influence and Manipulation” by Brian Clegg delves into the ways science and technology influence human behavior and decision-making.

I read this fascinating 288-page book cover-to-cover in one go. The writing style is fluid and not too cumbersome.

“‘The Matrix’ film portrayed a visceral, fictional kind of brainjacking, which is the term I’m using to indicate mechanisms that enable our brains to be changed by others, often without conscious awareness that this is happening,” Clegg writes, explaining his choice in title.

“This is entirely different from brainwashing,” he continues. “Brainjacking is a more subtle, far more widespread, and more interesting activity.”

The book examines how techniques such as storytelling, advertising and political strategies are used to inform, influence, and manipulate people. The book connects hot topics like artificial intelligence, big data, and subliminal messaging to reveal both the obvious and subtle forms of manipulation in modern life.

Clegg, a writer known for making complex scientific ideas accessible to general audiences, is the perfect author for this topic. Two of the British author’s previously published books were longlisted for the Royal Society Prize for Science Books.

With a background in physics, Clegg explores the intersections of science, technology and human behavior.

At the end of “Brainjacking,” he writes: “If there is one takeaway, I would like to stress that it is to be more aware of ‘brainjacking’ as it happens all around — both to you and by you. Embrace it where it's good; reject it where it is negative. But most of all, enjoy this particularly human activity.”

 


What We Are Reading Today: Wassily Kandinsky

What We Are Reading Today: Wassily Kandinsky
Updated 15 December 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: Wassily Kandinsky

What We Are Reading Today: Wassily Kandinsky

Authors: Larry Warsh and Dieter Buchhart

The great Russian modernist painter and theorist Wassily Kandinsky was one of the pioneers of abstraction in Western art.

Few documents provide more insight into his evolution from figural to abstract art—or into the development of abstraction in the early 20th century—than the pages of his sketchbooks.

Featuring previously unpublished drawings, “Wassily Kandinsky: The Sketchbooks” is a comprehensive selection of hundreds of sketches from 12 notebooks Kandinsky kept between 1889 and 1935.