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Murakami Haruki’s famous quotes

1. This is the circus world of Barnum and Bailey. Everything will be completely fake, but if you believe me, the fake will become true - Haruki Murakami "1Q84"

2. If you don’t know life, how can you know death. What does it take to balance the pain of life? ——Haruki Murakami, "All the Children of God Dance"

3. My life can have time for monotony, but there is no room for boredom. ——Haruki Murakami, "Kafka on the Shore"

4. When it’s time to go up, aim at the tallest tower and get to the top; when it’s time to go down, find the deepest well and go down to the bottom. ——Haruki Murakami, "The Journey of Strange Birds"

5. No one likes loneliness, but they just don’t want to be disappointed. ——Haruki Murakami "Norwegian Wood"

6. Unemployment makes me feel happy. I'm simplifying a little bit. I lost my hometown, I lost my youth, I lost my friends, I lost my wife, and I will lose it in three months at the age of twenty-nine. What will happen to me when I turn sixty? ——Haruki Murakami, "Sheep Hunting Adventures"

7. There was a period when I was almost fatally attracted to the music of Thelonious Monk. Every time I hear Monk's otherworldly piano sound - like cutting ice at a strange angle - I think to myself that this is jazz, and I even get warm comfort from it. ——Haruki Murakami, "Jazz Heroes"

8. I want to sit in a sunny place, read the newspaper up and down, left and right, word by word, like a cat licking its milk bowl, and then The various fragments of life that people develop in the sun are inhaled into the body and nourish every cell. ——Haruki Murakami, "The End of the World and the Cold Wonderland"

9. If people can never die, never disappear or grow old, and always live in high spirits in this world, then people should still be like us Is it possible to rack your brains like this and think about this and that? That is to say, we are more or less always thinking about this and that, right? Philosophy, psychology, logic, or religion, literature, etc. If there was no such thing as death, these long-winded thoughts and concepts might not appear on the earth, right? That is to say——" —— Haruki Murakami's "The Journey of Strange Birds"

10. The so-called facts are like cities buried in the desert. Sometimes the longer the time passes, the deeper the sand is buried; Sometimes, as time passes and the yellow sand is blown away by the wind, the outline of the city becomes clearer and clearer - Haruki Murakami's "Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage"

11. People are strange when you are stranger - "Norwegian Wood" by Haruki Murakami

12. However, the love between teenage boys and girls is like the breeze passing by them. , but it is precisely because of this that everything is full of freshness and excitement. - Haruki Murakami's "Like People in Love" 13. People. I am afraid that I live with memory as fuel. As for whether the memory is important in reality, it seems to be indifferent to maintaining life. It is just fuel, whether it is an advertising leaflet or a philosophical book sent with the origami. No matter if you bundle up ten-thousand-yuan bills, they will all be pieces of paper when you throw them into the fire. You don’t have to think about "Oh, this is Kant" or "This is the evening newspaper of readers' news" while the fire is burning. When the fire comes, they will all be just ordinary pieces of paper. It’s the same thing, whether it’s important memories or not-so-important memories, they’re all ordinary fuel without any difference. ——Haruki Murakami

14. Telling the truth will always lead to success. ——Haruki Murakami's "The Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage" 15. But what he said is indeed right. I have listened to this record over and over again for a long time. I never tire of listening to it. All the sounds and all the phrases are filled with nutrients that will never be exhausted. As a young person, I tried my best to absorb these nutrients until every cell was filled with them. During that time, even walking on the street was full of energy. My head is full of Munch's audio and video. I really want to tell someone how wonderful Monk's music is, but I can't find the appropriate words.

At that time, I thought that it was also a helpless form of loneliness. Not bad, lonely, but not bad. ——Haruki Murakami "Jazz Heroes Score"