Haruki Murakami doesn’t much go in for metaphors, but even he wouldn’t deny the aptness and symbolism of the moment when he decided he would write his first novel. It was April 1978 and Murakami was in the stands at Tokyo’s Meiji-Jingu Stadium, watching a baseball game, beer in hand. He was verging on 30, and nearly a decade into running a jazz café with his wife Yoko. A journeyman American batter
What’s your favorite book? Sarosh Shaheen Ottawa, Canada The Great Gatsby. I translated it a couple of years ago. I wanted to translate it when I was in my 20s, but I wasn’t ready. How has distance-running affected you as a writer? Pallavi Dixit Minneapolis, Minn. You need two things to write a big book: concentration and endurance. Running long distances gives me the power of endurance. What snea
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