---
product_id: 3225074
title: "Norwegian Wood"
price: "€ 27.70"
currency: EUR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.be/products/3225074-norwegian-wood
store_origin: BE
region: Belgium
---

# Norwegian Wood

**Price:** € 27.70
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Norwegian Wood
- **How much does it cost?** € 27.70 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.be](https://www.desertcart.be/products/3225074-norwegian-wood)

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## Why This Product

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## Description

From the bestselling author of Kafka on the Shore: A magnificent coming-of-age story steeped in nostalgia, “a masterly novel” ( The New York Times Book Review ) blending the music, the mood, and the ethos that were the sixties with a young man’s hopeless and heroic first love. Now with a new introduction by the author. Toru, a serious young college student in Tokyo, is devoted to Naoko, a beautiful and introspective young woman, but their mutual passion is marked by the tragic death of their best friend years before. As Naoko retreats further into her own world, Toru finds himself drawn to a fiercely independent and sexually liberated young woman. Stunning and elegiac, Norwegian Wood first propelled Haruki Murakami into the forefront of the literary scene.

Review: A coming of age story that you won't be able to put down - Murakami is someone I've never fully embraced, yet keep coming back to. I don't like some of the fantastic and surreal elements of his writing, but I'm also drawn by the energy, intelligence, and inventiveness of it. And I also love how he infuses his work with elements of Western culture, especially music. Norwegian Wood is a straight-on story about love and loss, and coming of age. It's not cluttered by any surrealism or fantasy. And it's loaded with musical references to classical and jazz, as well as the Western rock music of the late sixties. (As the title would suggest.) Thus, Norwegian Wood was exactly the right Murakami book to pick up next, the one book to push me further into his work. It tells the story of Toru Watanabe, a college freshman living in Tokyo. Like many young men his age, he doesn't know what he wants to do with his life, and majors in drama for no real reason. And like many men his age, women both complicate and clarify things. He has relationships with two completely different women: the troubled and introspective Naoko and the outgoing and spunky Midori. Naoko poses the most trouble for Toru for many reasons. First, she's the ex-girlfriend of Toru's best friend in high school, Kizuki, who committed suicide at 17. Kizuki's death had a major impact on both friends. For Naoko, she lost not just a boyfriend, but someone she had known since childhood, someone who had become almost a part of herself. For Toru, his friend's suicide changed his perspective on life, filling everything with the taste of death. `Death is not the opposite of life, but a part of it', becomes his new motto. So when Toru and Naoko meet again, accidentally, on the subway, there's a connection, but a troubled one. The ghost of Kizuki hangs over them. They begin with odd walks through the city, Toru trailing Naoko like a puppy. But eventually a form of love develops. Once things eventually come to a head on her 20th birthday, their relationship becomes further complicated as Naoko runs away to a kind of sanatorium in the mountains over Kyoto. Months pass before Toru even knows where she's gone, and he lives in a sort of limbo, going to school, working at a record store. Waiting. Meanwhile, he meets Midori, a fellow drama student. They form an immediate bond, though she has a boyfriend and has her own problems with her troubled family life, including a father dying of brain cancer. They become fast friends, and Toru finds himself attracted to her despite the pain he still feels at the loss of Naoko. Of course, Naoko muddies the waters again by writing him to tell him where she is and inviting him to visit. There he meets Naoko's roommate, Reiko, an older woman with a talent for music. The three spend much time sitting around while Reiko plays guitar for them, including Naoko's favorite song, Norwegian Wood. In a sense, Reiko becomes the third woman in Toru's life, because she is open, and they develop a friendship in his short time there. With Naoko, he learns some more about her issues, but just enough happens to keep him connected to her, not enough to resolve their love. He is still in a limbo. Murakami teases the frustrations of this state out of Toru. Toru agonizes over his dilemma, stuck between a woman he loves but can't have and a great woman he can have. Midori begins to fall for him and pressures him. But he's waiting for something to happen. Of course, something does. But then what? Has he waited too long? This is a great story, but it is further strengthened by great characters. Besides Toru and Midori, whose honest, straight-forward manners combine with deep vulnerabilities to make them both irresistible, Murakami fills the landscape with great supporting actors as well. Reiko steals each scene she walks into. Toru's anal roommate "Storm Trooper" makes for some good laughs, and is a great source of conversation for Toru. Nagasawa is a privileged student of an elite university who is drawn to Toru through a shared love of Western literature and uses his influence to help Toru out of a few jams. Yet his arrogance and womanizing also adds a layer of complexity to the friendship, as these traits both compel and repulse Toru. The characters really make this book hard to put down. Norwegian Wood is a great read and will definitely keep me on the path to reading more Murakami.
Review: Story about different relationship -- really good - I had no idea what to expect ... but this ended up being a really good story. As the author says in the forward, this is a fairly "straight" story. For me, it worked, and it was a very good read. The characters are ostensibly college students, but they all seemed to have very old souls. Maybe it's a Japanese thing and Japanese people are all like this -- what do I know? But they could have been described as 30-year-olds, and I think the story still would have worked. I read some of the other reviews and one review called out the rather sexist way that one of the sex scenes is described, and I think it's valid. I am always suspicious of male authors who think they have the right to describe what is going on in a woman's mind ... The conflicts are mostly about the nature of love and relationship. I found it pretty good.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #5,578 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #58 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction #333 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 23,001 Reviews |

## Images

![Norwegian Wood - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/712SInGyh5L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A coming of age story that you won't be able to put down
*by P***N on May 8, 2011*

Murakami is someone I've never fully embraced, yet keep coming back to. I don't like some of the fantastic and surreal elements of his writing, but I'm also drawn by the energy, intelligence, and inventiveness of it. And I also love how he infuses his work with elements of Western culture, especially music. Norwegian Wood is a straight-on story about love and loss, and coming of age. It's not cluttered by any surrealism or fantasy. And it's loaded with musical references to classical and jazz, as well as the Western rock music of the late sixties. (As the title would suggest.) Thus, Norwegian Wood was exactly the right Murakami book to pick up next, the one book to push me further into his work. It tells the story of Toru Watanabe, a college freshman living in Tokyo. Like many young men his age, he doesn't know what he wants to do with his life, and majors in drama for no real reason. And like many men his age, women both complicate and clarify things. He has relationships with two completely different women: the troubled and introspective Naoko and the outgoing and spunky Midori. Naoko poses the most trouble for Toru for many reasons. First, she's the ex-girlfriend of Toru's best friend in high school, Kizuki, who committed suicide at 17. Kizuki's death had a major impact on both friends. For Naoko, she lost not just a boyfriend, but someone she had known since childhood, someone who had become almost a part of herself. For Toru, his friend's suicide changed his perspective on life, filling everything with the taste of death. `Death is not the opposite of life, but a part of it', becomes his new motto. So when Toru and Naoko meet again, accidentally, on the subway, there's a connection, but a troubled one. The ghost of Kizuki hangs over them. They begin with odd walks through the city, Toru trailing Naoko like a puppy. But eventually a form of love develops. Once things eventually come to a head on her 20th birthday, their relationship becomes further complicated as Naoko runs away to a kind of sanatorium in the mountains over Kyoto. Months pass before Toru even knows where she's gone, and he lives in a sort of limbo, going to school, working at a record store. Waiting. Meanwhile, he meets Midori, a fellow drama student. They form an immediate bond, though she has a boyfriend and has her own problems with her troubled family life, including a father dying of brain cancer. They become fast friends, and Toru finds himself attracted to her despite the pain he still feels at the loss of Naoko. Of course, Naoko muddies the waters again by writing him to tell him where she is and inviting him to visit. There he meets Naoko's roommate, Reiko, an older woman with a talent for music. The three spend much time sitting around while Reiko plays guitar for them, including Naoko's favorite song, Norwegian Wood. In a sense, Reiko becomes the third woman in Toru's life, because she is open, and they develop a friendship in his short time there. With Naoko, he learns some more about her issues, but just enough happens to keep him connected to her, not enough to resolve their love. He is still in a limbo. Murakami teases the frustrations of this state out of Toru. Toru agonizes over his dilemma, stuck between a woman he loves but can't have and a great woman he can have. Midori begins to fall for him and pressures him. But he's waiting for something to happen. Of course, something does. But then what? Has he waited too long? This is a great story, but it is further strengthened by great characters. Besides Toru and Midori, whose honest, straight-forward manners combine with deep vulnerabilities to make them both irresistible, Murakami fills the landscape with great supporting actors as well. Reiko steals each scene she walks into. Toru's anal roommate "Storm Trooper" makes for some good laughs, and is a great source of conversation for Toru. Nagasawa is a privileged student of an elite university who is drawn to Toru through a shared love of Western literature and uses his influence to help Toru out of a few jams. Yet his arrogance and womanizing also adds a layer of complexity to the friendship, as these traits both compel and repulse Toru. The characters really make this book hard to put down. Norwegian Wood is a great read and will definitely keep me on the path to reading more Murakami.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Story about different relationship -- really good
*by S***I on May 8, 2026*

I had no idea what to expect ... but this ended up being a really good story. As the author says in the forward, this is a fairly "straight" story. For me, it worked, and it was a very good read. The characters are ostensibly college students, but they all seemed to have very old souls. Maybe it's a Japanese thing and Japanese people are all like this -- what do I know? But they could have been described as 30-year-olds, and I think the story still would have worked. I read some of the other reviews and one review called out the rather sexist way that one of the sex scenes is described, and I think it's valid. I am always suspicious of male authors who think they have the right to describe what is going on in a woman's mind ... The conflicts are mostly about the nature of love and relationship. I found it pretty good.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A great literary read.
*by C***S on November 8, 2024*

Over the years I have read a wide range of genres. Doing so has certainly added to my enjoyment but doubt any reader would claim doing so makes them anything special LOL. What it means is that life is complicated, that there is no one size fits all, that tracking down a murderer can be entertaining but so can entering the inner workings of the mind of certain characters, in this case students outside the mainstream, loners who do not fraternize and party with their peers. It is also interesting what attracts readers to a book. For me it was the title, then the description since I was unfamiliar with Haruki Murakami a the time. Thankfully that has now changed. Others have very adequately summarized the plot of Norwegian Wood so let me just say this is a literary book. There are no serial killers or car chases in it. For that I read one of several masters of the action genre, Barry Eisler for example. What is in this book is an interesting look at how hard growing up can be for some young people. According to statista.com there were 12.5 to 13.2 suicides per 100,000 in the population between 1950-1970, the period (60's) covered in this book. According to the US Department of Health and Human Services: "The suicide rate among people aged 10–24 . . . increased 62% from 2007 through 2021 (from 6.8 deaths per 100,000 to 11.)" Why do young people end their lives? Why? There is no one-reason-fits-all explanation but in my opinion this book allows us to visit what happens to its characters in this particular age group. Each person is well presented within his/her own parameters/psychosis and that includes the 13 year old female. Children like that do in fact exist. I label them negative manipulators. They learn very early how to manipulate themselves into and out of any situation, always to the detriment of those caught up in one of the negative manipulations. A John Steinbeck novel, "East of Eden," has such a character and there was such a person in my neighborhood when growing up. All 13 year olds do NOT behave as we wish them to. In fact, few people will fit into a predetermined ideal of what we think them to be. I do not like SPOILERS but they seemed to flow out of me anyway while writing this. So, then, please note that the remainder of this post contains SPOILERS. Interpretation of events and even written words varies from individual to individual. It appeared to me that Naoko did not refute Toru's advances on his visit and even noted that for the first time ever she got wet, a fact she discussed with him afterward. She improved off and on for a time before starting the downward slide once again. While in the free-form type sanatorium she seemed to enjoy Toru's visits. He visited at her invitation. She kept his letters. What tipped her over the edge was not clear as she even worsened under more advanced care at another sanatorium. Prior to ending her life she did note that she did not want to be violated again which I took to mean loss of control. A matter of perspective? When one thinks on it, it is a miracle so many of us survive the growing-up process and become productive adults. Tragically, Kizuki and Naoko did not survive but it appears that Reiko has a chance since she left the sanatorium. Will Midori and Toru make it and do so together? Another character, Nagasawa, had well developed aspirations so he seems to be headed off into the land of adulthood on his own terms. Realistically but tragically, unhappy people like Naoko decide to end their lives. Even so, literary books like Norwegian Wood will not appeal to everyone but for those of us who enjoy a good literary read, then this book is highly recommended. I look forward to reading other Murakami books.

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*Product available on Desertcart Belgium*
*Store origin: BE*
*Last updated: 2026-05-23*