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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

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A couple of months ago, a story about the closure of yet another local library caught my eye at the same time as I was searching for a subject for the sixty-some students I teach to tackle—a problem of sorts for them to set about solving. I had in my head an exercise which would require each pupil to suggest a selection of strategies that might make the local library relevant again.

Quite quickly we hit a wall, as I recall. It wasn’t that the kids didn’t grasp the task at hand; if anything, they understood the problem too well. None of them, you see—not a one—had even been to a library, far less used its facilities. In short order I saw that I’d based the week’s work on a false premise: that local libraries had ever been relevant to them.

They certainly were to me, once—as they are to the narrator of The Strange Library by Haruki Murakami: a nearly new novelette from the author of Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage.

Originally released in Japan in the lean years between After Dark and IQ84, The Strange Library, as translated by Ted Goosen, tells the tale of an anonymous boy who gets more than he bargained for when, on the way home from school one afternoon, he visits his local library to look through a textbook or two:

To tell the truth, I wasn’t all that eager to learn about Ottoman tax collection—the topic had just popped into my head on the way home from school. As in, I wonder, how did the Ottomans collect taxes? Like that. And ever since I was little my mother had told me, if you don’t know something, go to the library and look it up.

To that end, The Strange Library’s nameless narrator is directed to a room in the basement of the building, where “a little old man” with “tiny black spots [dotting] his face like a swarm of flies” suggests several suitable books. The thing is, these books can’t be borrowed—they have to be read in the reading room—and though the boy is already second-guessing himself, he’s so obscenely obedient that he allows this apparent assistant to shepherd him still deeper into the library’s lower levels.

Before long, he’s completely lost:

The corridor forked and forked again, branching off repeatedly, and in every case the old man chose our route without a moment’s hesitation, swerving first to the right, then to the left. Sometimes he would open a door and we would enter a completely different corridor.

My mind was in turmoil. It was too weird—how could our city library have such an enormous labyrinth in its basement?

Murakami The Strange Library UK cover

Believe you me, readers: it gets weirder. The old man instructs the boy to commit the aforementioned textbooks to memory, then essentially imprisons him. “One month from now,” his jailer explains, “I will personally examine you. If I conclude that you have mastered their contents completely, then I will set you free.” Failing that, he’ll eat the boy’s brains.

Murakami is clearly keen to explore loneliness in this story—the last chapters aren’t in the slightest subtle about the themes of the piece—yet The Strange Library’s narrator spends much of his month in company. “A small man clad in the skin of a sheep” cooks his food and engages him in conversation, and a girl who speaks with her hands visits with him in the interim:

She was so pretty that looking at her made my eyes hurt. She appeared to be about my age. Her neck, wrists, and ankles were so slender they seemed as if they might break under the slightest pressure. Her long, straight hair shone as if it were spun with jewels.

But of course, this shining specimen gives the poor boy hope. With all his heart he wants to take her away from this terrible place—and to save the sheep man while he’s at it—but how? “I’m not a complete idiot,” he admits, “but my mind got scrambled when that big black dog bit me, and it hasn’t been quite right since.”

Strange as so many of the elements of The Strange Library are, they’re far, I’m afraid, from startling. Broken boys, beautiful girls, secret spaces and unfortunate faces are all pretty much par for the course in Murakami’s narratives, and when you expect the unexpected, its agents are rendered ineffective. Similarly, the demand for answers that usually pulls a reader through books built on mysteries is diminished when you know none will be forthcoming—and none are, naturally.

The Strange Library’s characters are correspondingly colourless. They are what they appear to be, until they aren’t, but rather than realising these differences through development, change comes suddenly, as if the wind has simply shifted—and with it, the world. This, too, is distancing.

Earlier this year, I was over the moon that Murakami had moved on from the increasingly mundane mode of magical realism that had laid his last books low. That The Strange Library bears that brand isn’t exactly surprising—it’s new translation of a six year old story—but it is a little dispiriting.

Be that as it may, The Strange Library’s tremendous presentation almost makes up for the fiction’s failings. Just in time for Christmas, this irresistibly giftable edition, designed by Suzanne Dean, is illustrated with images borrowed from the London Library’s archives—a collection that includes everything from cookery books to Birds of the British Islands—making every page a pleasure, and several surprises of the exact sort the story itself sadly lacks.

The Strange Library is available now from Knopf Doubleday.


Niall Alexander is an extra-curricular English teacher who reads and writes about all things weird and wonderful for The Speculative Scotsman, Strange Horizons, and Tor.com. He’s been known to tweet, twoo.

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