“I write spontaneously,” Murakami said. “I don’t think about anything when I write, I don’t know anything when I write.”
He related his writing to computer games, saying that when he writes he is like the programmer and the player at the same time; the mind is divided in half.
Murakami discussed how we are living in a world that is reality but underneath, he strongly believes there is an “underground”. In addition, there is a kind of underground within his mind. “I have things in the back of my mind that are lying beneath my conscience. Writing for me is a passive way to get these thoughts inside of me, out.”
Murakami strongly emphasized that there is no underlying meaning beneath his works, and he does not want his work interpreted.
He does not plan anything; he just writes. “If I choose to write about sheep, it is because I happened to write about sheep. There is no deep significance.”
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And I loved his advice to aspiring fiction writers, which really says it all:
“Don’t think too hard.”
4 comments:
Dear Sharon
Don't think too hard. Such simple, but profound advice. Thanks. I really needed that in writing the first draft of my novel. The thinking (and editing) can come later.
Rgds
Lydia
hi there,
I love Haruki Murakami. Please correct the spelling of his name. Thank you.
Hello Mangolisa
Sorry lah - spelling not my strong point. Of course I will put it write.
hi sharon
now i know i am not an aimless writer. i used to think something was wrong with me because of the way i write... i don't know what's coming out until it's all out. i have not read murakami yet... any recommendations for a virgin murakami reader?
maya
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