The Second Bakery Attack, By Haruki Murakami (1981)

 The Second Bakery Attack, By Haruki Murakami (1981)

9/10

Only after re-reading the story one more time to check whether there are any parts I might have missed, I realized that everything that happened in this story is unbelievably illogical. Waking up in the middle of the night in severe hunger is surely possible, but how in the world did that conclude into robbing a McDonalds and taking thirty bigmacs? It’s amazing how the author was able to make the situation seam logical and smooth.

It was quite strange how what the couple did was a crime, but is still so humorous. Something about Haruki’s ways of explaining details such as the sleeping customers and paying for the drink makes even the most intense situations feel comical than serious. It gives the whole story a magical atmosphere.

My favorite part of the story was how the narrator explains his feelings like floating on the ocean right above a volcano. It was very wholesome when the narrator decides to let the waves take him wherever they takes him.

I have only read two short stories written by Haruki Murakami yet, but I am already addicted to his strangely special writing. I rated this story nine out of ten. 

(198 words)

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  1. Good observations. It is true that Murakami has a special quality to his writing that makes him particularly Murakami-ish. If you get a chance try one of his novels such as Kafka on the Shore.

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