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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Haruki Murakami Lite
I definitely enjoyed this book for a lot of the same reasons that I enjoy Haruki Murakami's. It resembles Murakami's work in that it is set in an international, pop-culture kind of world, a world that makes as much sense to American readers as it does to Japanese readers. And it is a fast, fun, read, while at the same time at least touching on some more serious...
Published on December 17, 1998

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great author, fair book
I have read much of Shimada's work in Japanese, mostly short-stories, and I have to say that the English translation of Dream Messenger falls flat. Philip Gabriel's translation captures Shimada's unique cadence only very infrequently, losing much of what makes Shimada's work a joy to read. To Gabriel's credit, Shimada tends to twist and contort Japanese grammer...
Published on August 11, 2000 by Sean Hamlin


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great author, fair book, August 11, 2000
This review is from: Dream Messenger (Hardcover)
I have read much of Shimada's work in Japanese, mostly short-stories, and I have to say that the English translation of Dream Messenger falls flat. Philip Gabriel's translation captures Shimada's unique cadence only very infrequently, losing much of what makes Shimada's work a joy to read. To Gabriel's credit, Shimada tends to twist and contort Japanese grammer frequently, and he often turns traditional idioms on their heads. His metaphors, too, are very original and very provocative in Japanese. Unfortunately, very little of this translates well into English, and I don't envy Gabriel his job of having to try.

Aside from the difficulties of the translation, Shimada is, I feel, a much better short-story writer. His quirky style tends to lose steam in longer works, leaving you, by the end of the narrative, grasping for something concrete to wrap your mind around.

I was disappointed by Dream Messenger, considering how much I enjoyed his other works (the reason why I couldn't stand giving him any less than 3 stars in this review). With the right work and the right translation, Shimada could easily be ranked alongside Murakami Haruki. Unfortunately, this is the only piece of Shimada's that has been translated into English thus far. Maybe Gabriel will do better with some of Shimada's short-stories.

Unless I beat him to it...;)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Haruki Murakami Lite, December 17, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Dream Messenger (Hardcover)
I definitely enjoyed this book for a lot of the same reasons that I enjoy Haruki Murakami's. It resembles Murakami's work in that it is set in an international, pop-culture kind of world, a world that makes as much sense to American readers as it does to Japanese readers. And it is a fast, fun, read, while at the same time at least touching on some more serious themes. However, my overall feeling about it is that it lacked the organization and cohesiveness of Murakami's works. It left a lot more just kind of hanging, and it left a lot of interesting ideas only half-developed. Overall though, definitely worth checking out.
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5.0 out of 5 stars absolutely sparkling, May 15, 2002
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"dazyner" (los angeles CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dream Messenger (Paperback)
when one encounters this unusual novel by shimada, one's mind needs to be kept open. one of the readers' review said the story wasn't organized. i think it was very deliberately done.
this novel is a literary jazz. it constantly wanders yet gets pulled together.the whole concept of the story is based on the wanderers and wandering. it is about defying everything that devides the world in dualism and all the institutional cliches we have in mind. this is about reinvention and re-integration of the existing world in order for us to evolve into the next step. matthew is a wandering soul. the rental child who, instead of being raised in a stable warm family, wanders about from one set of parents to another to fulfil their heart's content. dream messenger wanders all over with no discrimination of borders--between reality and dreams, self and alter-egos, continent to continent, person to person.

this book is so completely on a different level. without an open mind it will be hard to accept it let alone understand. but i do agree the japanese version of the book was definitely much more inclusive of shimada's concepts. english translation does very much fall flat.

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Ask this question: Who are your translators?!, October 12, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Dream Messenger (Hardcover)
Why compare Shimada to Murakami? I'll tell you why: its all you've got to go on! I agree with the other reviewers that this is not the best of what Shimada has written. The reason that its in English is b/c it was a prize-winner. The translators go by what sells as well as their own interests and Dream Messenger obviously hasn't sold or there'd be more of Shimada's novels translated. He's (Shimada) a much more important novelist though... Why are there only two books by Nakagami Kenji translated? Same reason.

Sometimes I just wish Murakami would just go write in English! That's where his primary audience is. But maybe that's just his ultimate parody.

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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Be Careful, August 14, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Dream Messenger (Hardcover)
This book does not even remotely approach the brillance of Murakami's writing. Main characters are introduced and then dropped - as well as the plot. Be very careful when reading other people's reviews is the advice I wish to give after reading this "novel". Rather a childish and confused perspective and it rarely says anything of any depth concerning culture.
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Dream Messenger
Dream Messenger by Masahiko Shimada (Hardcover - Dec. 1992)
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