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Eight stories in which everyday life intertwines with memories, music and inexplicable events, revealing the fragility of identity and the transience of life.
First Person Singular is a collection of eight short stories by Japanese writer Haruki Murakami that intertwine reality, memories, and elements of the unexplained in a distinctive way. The narrators, often resembling the author himself, recall youth, lost loves, music, baseball, and chance encounters that leave a lasting mark, while the boundaries between autobiography and fiction remain intentionally blurred.
At the heart of the stories are seemingly ordinary moments that gradually take on symbolic meaning. Murakami explores how memories shape identity, how reliable they are, and how the past continues to influence the present. Everyday situations often develop into encounters with unusual phenomena or mysterious characters, creating an atmosphere of mild unease and wonder.
With a minimalist style, subtle humor, and numerous musical references, the author builds intimate stories about loneliness, transience, coincidence, and unrealized possibilities. First Person Singular is not a collection that offers straightforward answers, but rather invites the reader to reflect on the nature of memory, identity, and storytelling. It is a melancholic, elegant, and deeply human work that will particularly appeal to fans of Murakami's literature, but also to readers who appreciate subtle psychological stories.
One copy is available





