From An Outsider's Eyes--
Impressions of After-reading of Norwegian Wood
Due to the love to a boy, I fell in love with a book in my
my stories and those in the book up and floundering confusedly in the river
of youth, I just want to catch that straw of love. Today, fading green
ing into the Norwegian Woodagain, what I see are the lost youth
and the hard growth
Coming into the world once again, I still appreciate Watanabe and
cherish this lonely boy as much as my first reading. His eyes occupied
by loneliness attracted meonce more. Watanabe has not youth, or, he does
not wadethe youth river. Wandering aimlessly on the river bank and seeing
others struggling in the river, desires to save others rose again and again.
But what he finds at last is that: everyone has their ownriver which others
are excluded from so that his outstretched hand works faintly as a shadow.
Even so, Watanabe, on the shore, has panied wholehearted with
everyone who struggles hard in the river , like Kizuki and Naoko, and
inevitable witnesses their drowning.
Those people and experience impel Watanabe to strand on the shore. He
works, reads, listens to music and winds himself up every day; he manages
to fill all the time but away from his ownyouth with heavy dust. Therefore,
Midori-ko just has a feeling – “you always curled up in your own world,
but I was pressing 'stuff' knock
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