Suckerfish

  • Art of Travel
  • Travel Narratives
  • Archive
    • Art of Travel (Fall 2011)
    • Art of Travel (Spring 2011)
    • Art of Travel (Fall 2010)
    • A Sense of Place (Spring 2011)
    • Travel Classics (Spring 2011)
    • Travel Fictions (Fall 2010)
    • The Travel Habit (Fall 2011)
    • The Travel Habit (Fall 2010)
  • Research
    • Place
    • Travel
    • Search Bobst
    • Citing sources
  • Blogs
    • Log in/Create account
    • Help
    • Home

Travel Fictions

Course Materials

  • Home
  • Syllabus
  • Assignments
  • For further study
    • Daisy Miller
    • The Sun Also Rises
    • The Sheltering Sky
    • On the Road
    • Death in Venice
    • The Comfort of Strangers
    • Elephanta Suite
    • A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary For Lovers
    • Sputnik Sweetheart
  • More Travel Novels
  • Videos
  • News

Sputnik Sweetheart Bibliography

Michael Fisch. "In search of the real: technology, shock and language in Murakami

Haruki's Sputnik Sweetheart" Japan Forum, Volume 16, Issue 3 November 2004 , pages 361 - 383

Michael Fisch Sputnik Sweetheart. TOM LECLAIR. Book. (May 2001) p68. From Literature Resource Center.

The Reluctant Postmodernist. Matthew Carl Strecher. Dances With Sheep: The Quest for Identity in the Fiction of Murakami Haruki. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan, 2002. p206-215. Rpt. inContemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Jeffrey W. Hunter. Vol. 274.  Detroit: Gale, p206-215. From Literature Resource Center.

Sputnik Sweetheart. (Japan). Yoshiko Yokochi Samuel. World Literature Today. 75 (Summer-Autumn 2001) p138. From Literature Resource Center.

Sputnik Sweetheart. Brian Evenson. The Review of Contemporary Fiction. 21.3 (Fall 2001) p215. From Literature Resource Center.

Postmodernism and Genre Fiction as Deferred Action: Haruki Murakami and the Noir Tradition. Steffen Hantke. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction 49.1 (Fall 2007): p3-23. Rpt. inContemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Jeffrey W. Hunter. Vol. 274.  Detroit: Gale, p3-23. From Literature Resource Center.

De-Exoticizing Haruki Murakami's Reception. Matthew Richard Chozick. Comparative Literature Studies 45.1 (2008): p62-73. Rpt. inContemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Jeffrey W. Hunter. Vol. 274.  Detroit: Gale, p62-73. From Literature Resource Center.

Lost in orbit: Haruki Murakami's new novel plots the course of a young Japanese woman who disappears in Greece. Daniel Zalewski. The New York Times Book Review. 106.23 (June 10, 2001) Book Review Desk: p13. From Literature Resource Center.

Counting the cliches. JULIAN LOOSE. New Statesman (1996). 130.4540 (June 4, 2001) p55. From Literature Resource Center.

Sean Wilsey Talks with Haruki Murakami. Haruki Murakami and Sean Wilsey. The Believer Book of Writers Talking to Writers. Ed. Vendela Vida. San Francisco, Calif.: Believer Books, 2005. p241-250. Rpt. inContemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Jeffrey W. Hunter. Vol. 274.  Detroit: Gale, p241-250. From Literature Resource Center.

Exorcising Ghosts: Murakami Resources website

Haruki Murakami's Storytelling World, by Patricia Welch World Literature Today (2005)

Back to the Unfamiliar: The Travel Writings of Murakami Haruki, by Philip Gabriel Japanese Language and Literature(2002)

"Ten things you need to know about Haruki Murakami."  The Sunday Times, July 20, 2008.

"The cult of murakami."  Telegraph

"Time, the Body and Non-Japanese in Murakami’s Works." Atsuko Handa

RoopleTheme