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Dance Dance Dance

Dance Dance Dance

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Author: Haruki Murakami
Creator: Alfred Birnbaum
Publisher: Vintage
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy Used: $6.14
You Save: $8.81 (59%)

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New (38) Used (30) Collectible (4) from $6.14

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 71 reviews
Sales Rank: 22264

Media: Paperback
Pages: 416
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 1

ISBN: 0679753796
Dewey Decimal Number: 895.635
EAN: 9780679753797
ASIN: 0679753796

Publication Date: January 31, 1995
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Dance, Dance, Dance
  • Paperback - DANCE, DANCE, DANCE
  • Audio Download - Dance, Dance, Dance (Unabridged)
  • Paperback - Dance Dance Dance
  • Hardcover - Dance Dance Dance: A Novel
  • Paperback - Dance Dance Dance a Novel
  • Paperback - Dance Dance Dance
  • Audio CD - Dance Dance Dance

Similar Items:

  • A Wild Sheep Chase: A Novel
  • Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World: A Novel (Vintage International)
  • The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle: A Novel
  • Norwegian Wood
  • South of the Border, West of the Sun: A Novel

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This wildly propulsive novel by the acclaimed author of A Wild Sheep Chase focuses on a man searching for a former lover who vanished mysteriously from a seedy hotel. But each new clue to Kiki's whereabouts leads him deeper into a labryrinth of physical violence and metaphysical dread. "A world-class writer."--Washington Post Book World


Customer Reviews:   Read 66 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Three cheers for the Sheep Man   September 30, 2008
Abra (Las Vegas, NV United States)
I've said it before, I truly do like Murakami alot because he likes writing these normal situations like eating donuts and reading a newspaper and watching TV in his stories but for some odd reason it just never gets boring. This book is the sequel to "The Wild Sheep Chase" which became one of my favorite books this year. And yes, it does connect to everything eventually. Still, as most sequels go, I liked the first book better and I do think it could have gone without this little book. But I bet the "Sheep Man" fans wanted this book and it started getting stranger and stranger as it finally wrapped up the little twists. I do have one complaint about this book though but it's a little thing really. One of the characters in the book was this Filipino prostitute whom Murakami wrote as someone who speaks very broken English. The thing is though, Filipinos don't speak in broken English, bad grammar maybe but NOT broken English how can they, when other than Tagalog, English is also their national language and you learn it from Kindergarten on. Anyways, that was my one gripe. But then again, maybe it was due to the translations.


4 out of 5 stars Japan's Magic Man   August 1, 2008
G. Bestick (Dobbs Ferry, NY USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful


I read a couple other Murakami novels and they glanced off me, but this one stuck. An unnamed narrator, adrift in modern Tokyo, dreams of a girlfriend who disappeared years ago. He returns to the hotel where he last saw her and there discovers a secret floor that's a gateway to another dimension. On this floor he encounters the Sheep Man, making a return appearance from Murakami's earlier novel A Wild Sheep Chase. Our protagonist searches for his lost girlfriend, befriends a teenage psychic, and reconnects with an old high school buddy who's now a famous actor. The plot meanders between Tokyo, Osaka and Hawaii, but the pages keep turning. In the end, we find out what happened to the girlfriend, and our anomic hero learns what it means to reach out to other human beings.

Murakami is a bit of a one trick pony, but it's a good trick. He speaks through a disaffected thirtysomething narrator with a vaguely creative profession (the one in Dance, Dance, Dance is a freelance journalist). In flat, precise prose, this narrator takes us through his unremarkable daily life. At some point in the story, our narrator bumps up against another realm or dimension outside the quotidian one he lives in, a dimension where the past is present and dead people are still alive. Out of this collision with the metaphysical emerges a new understanding of the mystery and complexity of existence.

Why is this a good trick? Because the Japanese culture Murakami writes about is fascinated with surfaces and secrets. His hard-boiled prose captures the surface; his metaphysical plots expose the secrets. Although Murakami is very international in his outlook and his cultural references, his emotional preoccupations are Japanese to the core, which explains his popularity there.

Murakami also manages to wring a surprising amount of emotion from his tight, reportorial prose. The main characters in Dance, Dance, Dance want something they can barely glimpse and struggle to name. Murakami's best trick of all is that he makes their yearning so affecting.



5 out of 5 stars Not Your Normal Senior Prom   April 2, 2008
Dick Johnson (Oklahoma USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

We interrupt this review for a Public Service Announcement. It is STRONGLY recommended that you read Murakami's A Wild Sheep Chase before reading this book. While not 100% necessary, your enjoyment of DDD will be greatly enhanced! We now return you to your regularly scheduled review.

I got so wrapped up in the book I almost thought I was a part of it. There was that gnawing at the edge of my mind - a glimmer of understanding. Then an insight: I am in the book! Murakami has a way of writing the reader into the story; making the reader an unmentioned character.

This is too real for magical realism; it's post-modern with a reliable narrator; it has a tinge of science fiction and fantasy but is really neither. It's simply Murakami.



5 out of 5 stars if only we all understood japanese   February 13, 2008
Yuwei (between Beijing, China and Toronto, Canada)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

this is my second haruki murakami novel, having previously read "norwegian wood". i wont go into detail about how much i enjoyed the novel, which is apparent anyway from my rating, but i do want to agree with the reviewer who mentioned that the english text is abridged.
i read the novel in the mandarin-chinese translated edition, and though i ( not being able to read japanese) obviously cannot be certain that the chinese version isn't somewhat abridged as well, after comparing segments of the book i own with an english translated and adapted version, i found several substantial differences, and I have reason to believe that the version i read is probably closer to the original text.
I actually felt, very strongly, in fact, that I liked the chinese version i had read more as it seems more in the style of HM ( but having read norwegian wood in chinese also, i cant promise that i dont have an unclear perception of what his style is), and some segments in the english text make the novel seem boring( e.g the narrator rambling on and on), while in the chinese text there is more use of free indirect discourse/stream of conciousness and it's hardly as annoying.
so, perhaps, if you didn't enjoy the novel because of that, dont blame haruki murakami. blame the translator.



3 out of 5 stars it's no "Hard Boiled Wonderland..."   February 2, 2008
R. Friesel Jr. (Burlington, VT USA)
The hotel in Murakami's Dance, Dance, Dance seems to have been built by the same guy that built Danielewski's House of Leaves.

I didn't enjoy this one as much as Hard-Boiled Wonderland... but it still had some entertaining moments and was certainly worth the read.

That said, I didn't feel that it was a particularly special or memorable werk.


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