Home 5 News 5 Library devoted to Japan novelist Murakami to open in Tokyo

Library devoted to Japan novelist Murakami to open in Tokyo

by | Sep 25, 2021 | News

A library devoted to Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami’s writings, scrapbooks, and record collection open next week in Tokyo for research, cultural exchange, and a gathering spot for his fans.

The Haruki Murakami Library, which opens Oct. 1 at Waseda University, his alma mater, features a replica of his study with a simple desk, rows of bookshelves, and a record player, as well as a café run by students that serves his favourite dark roast coffee. Visitors enter through a tunnel-like passageway designed by architect Kengo Kuma, one of Murakami’s many fans. Kuma says tunnels are his image of Murakami’s stories, in which protagonists often travel between the real and the surreal.

Visitors enter through a tunnel-like passageway in the five-story building designed and renovated by architect Kengo Kuma, one of Murakami’s many fans and the designer of the Tokyo Olympics stadium. Kuma said tunnels are his image of Murakami’s stories, in which protagonists often travel between the real and the surreal.

The library, officially called the Waseda International House of Literature, currently houses about 3,000 of Murakami’s books, manuscripts, and other materials, including translations of his work in dozens of languages, and part of his massive collection of records. At a lounge next to the library, there is an audio room where records are on display, some stamped “Petercat,” the name of the jazz bar he ran after graduating from Waseda.

They include records by Billie Holiday, Sonny Rollins, John Coltrane, and Miles Davis.

Murakami said he will contribute as much as possible to the library. It currently focuses on his works, but he said he hopes it will be expanded to include those of other novelists “so it becomes a wide-ranging and fluid research space.”

After his 1979 debut novel, “Hear the Wind Sing,” the 1987 romance “Norwegian Wood” became his first bestseller, establishing him as a young literary star. He is also known for bestsellers such as “A Wild Sheep Chase,” “The Wind-up Bird Chronicle,” and “1Q84,” and is a perennial candidate for the Nobel Literature Prize.

Murakami is an avid listener and collector of music ranging from classical to jazz and rock, and it serves as an important motif in many of his stories. He also has written books on music.

Beginning in 2018, Murakami has hosted a “Murakami Radio” show on Tokyo FM on which he plays his favorite music and sometimes takes requests and questions from listeners.

The archive project emerged in 2018 when Murakami offered to donate his collection of materials, which had grown so much over the past 40 years that he was running out of storage space at his home and office.

Tadashi Yanai, the founder of the parent company of Uniqlo and a Waseda alumnus, donated 1.2 billion yen ($11 million) for the cost of the library.

Recent News

16Jun
Women’s Prizes 2026 Winners Announced

Women’s Prizes 2026 Winners Announced

The Women’s Prize for Fiction 2026 has been awarded to American author Virginia Evans for The Correspondent (Penguin Michael Joseph), and the Women’s Prize for Non-Fiction 2026 was awarded to The Finest Hotel in Kabul: A People’s History of Afghanistan (Hutchinson Heinemann) by Lyse Doucet, the BBC’s chief international correspondent.  Each author wins £30,000.   […]

16Jun
Meta Upholds Arbitration Order Against Careless People Author

Meta Upholds Arbitration Order Against Careless People Author

Facebook’s owner Meta has responded to numerous reports of whistleblower Sarah Wynn-Williams not being allowed to talk at the Hay Festival in the UK.   Wynn-Williams is the author of Careless People, her exposé of the company.   The Bookseller reports: ‘Wynn-Williams was prevented from talking after receiving legal advice that taking part in the […]

13Jun
Marjane Satrapi Dies at 56

Marjane Satrapi Dies at 56

Marjane Satrapi, the French-Iranian artist, film-maker and graphic novelist whose acclaimed memoir Persepolis helped reshape international perceptions of Iran, has died at the age of 56. In a statement provided to French news agency AFP, relatives said she had “died of sadness” after the death of her husband, the Swedish producer Mattias Ripa. Ripa died […]

Related Posts

Meta Upholds Arbitration Order Against Careless People Author

Meta Upholds Arbitration Order Against Careless People Author

Facebook’s owner Meta has responded to numerous reports of whistleblower Sarah Wynn-Williams not being allowed to talk at the Hay Festival in the UK.   Wynn-Williams is the author of Careless People, her exposé of the company.   The Bookseller reports: ‘Wynn-Williams...

Marjane Satrapi Dies at 56

Marjane Satrapi Dies at 56

Marjane Satrapi, the French-Iranian artist, film-maker and graphic novelist whose acclaimed memoir Persepolis helped reshape international perceptions of Iran, has died at the age of 56. In a statement provided to French news agency AFP, relatives said she had “died...

Dua Lipa Reshapes Literary Conversations

Dua Lipa Reshapes Literary Conversations

This week, Dua Lipa got married in Sicily at a celebration that included a party staged inside a vintage bookstore, a nod to how she and actor Callum Turner first met — over the same novel. Service95, her multimedia platform, launched a book club that most people...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this