ChristianityToday.com
Home CT Mag Church/Ministry Bible/Life Communities Chat Entertainment Schools/Jobs Shopping Free! Help
Women's Survival Kit

HomeArchivesCurrent CTContact Us

Search

Subscribe

News and Commentary from a Biblical Perspective

Subscribe to Christianity Today
Save 58%


Hot Issues
Faith & Thought
Churches & Ministry
Culture & Technology
International

Weblog
Movies
Columns

Message Boards


ChristianBibleStudies.com



Should evangelicals lobby on global warming?

 • No, there is no such thing.
 • No, our priority should be evangelism.
• No, the science is still unclear.
 • Yes, it is our job to care for creation.
 • Yes, concern for the climate is neighbor love.
 • Yes, we need to address all social issues.
 • I don't know.

Take the poll


HOLIDAYS & EVENTS
CTI Celebrates 50 Years!
HOT ISSUES:
Christian Soldiers
Shopping
Books & Culture
Christian History &
  Biography

Faith in the Workplace
Subscribe to CTDirect
Free headlines to your e-mail inbox or RSS reader.

CTDirect (daily)


CTWeekly


XML  RSS Feed
XML  More Feeds


New Today
Olsen: Latter-day Complaints

Weblog: Top Courts in N.Y., Ga. Uphold Gay Marriage Bans

Bookmarks: Turning Around The Mainline

New This Week


Home > Christianity Today Magazine > Columns > Books & Culture Corner

Christianity Today, Week of August 19

Books & Culture Corner: After the Quake
Bedside reading for the anniversary of 9/11.
By John Wilson | posted 08/19/2002

In the next several weeks, we'll be bombarded with words and images in every conceivable media format, seeking to commemorate the events of 9/11 and maybe even make a buck in the process. The books have already started to arrive: What We Saw, for instance, a compendium of CBS coverage introduced by Dan Rather and published by Simon & Schuster, featuring "The Events of September 11, 2001—in Words, Pictures, and Video" (included with the book is a DVD of CBS's news coverage).

But maybe some of the best books to mark the occasion, if you are so inclined, will be books that weren't written explicitly for that purpose. One such is Haruki Murakami's slim book of stories, After the Quake (Knopf).

Japan suffered two extraordinary shocks in 1995 in the space of only a couple of months. In January of that year, the port city of Kobe was struck by a devastating earthquake that killed more than 4,000 people and displaced several hundred thousand. The city, much of which had been rebuilt after massive destruction in World War II, lay in ruins. In March, while the nation was still reeling from that disaster, the apocalyptic sect Aum Shinrikyo sought to hasten the end of the world by releasing the nerve gas, sarin, in the Tokyo subway. While only eleven people died, more than 5,000 suffered from exposure to the gas, and the psychological impact on the Japanese people was incalculable.

Murakami, a best-selling Japanese novelist who had been living for some time in the United States, decided to return to Japan. In response to the Aum Shinrikyo attack, he interviewed many victims; he also interviewed current or former members of Aum. The two short books he produced as a result were published in one volume in English translation as Underground: The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche (Vintage, 2001), reviewed earlier this year in the pages of Books and Culture ["Comparative Terrorism," by Christopher Harmon, March/April 2002].

In response to the quake, Murakami wrote a series of six short stories, each of which is set in February 1995. Published in Japan in 2000 under the title of one of the stories, "All God's Children Can Dance," the book has just appeared in English as After the Quake.

Certain writers have an indefinable gift for expressing the mood of their times. Murakami is one such writer. He has a winsomely quirky imagination that reminds me of the late Richard Brautigan, a taste for the outrageous in the vein of Tom Robbins (less winsome, to me at least), and some of the perversity that is so common in modern Japanese literature (Tanizaki, Kawabata, Mishima, et al.), but more casual, nonchalant. His young people may be Japanese, but they are uncannily similar to many young people in America. Much of what gets called "postmodern" is fleshed out in Murakami's fiction, above all the pervasive sense of arbitrariness and the absence of any stable system of belief.

How does such a writer respond to disaster? After the Quake is Murakami's answer. Running through the stories is dissatisfaction with the unthinking materialism that is so powerful in Japan as well as in the United States. Dreams play a role in many of the stories; there are repeated intimations of other realities, of cosmic conflicts between good and evil (but perhaps the good and evil are somehow intertwined, interdependent). Above all, there are the virtues of love and commitment. The last story in the book concludes:

But right now I have to stay here and keep watch over this woman and this girl. I will never let anyone—not anyone—try to put them into that crazy box—not even if the sky should fall or the earth crack open with a roar.

The protagonist of "All God's Children Can Dance" is the son of a devout Christian woman. It is interesting to see how her faith is treated. She is in some ways a figure of absurdity, yet she and other volunteers from her church have gone to help the quake victims while the protagonist gets drunk. The mother's beliefs are presented in a caricature of popular Christianity (though you only have to turn on the tv or the radio to recall that such caricatures didn't grow out of thin air), and at first the reader may suppose that this is nothing more than another dismissal of the faith as not simply untrue but downright ridiculous.

And yet as the story twists and turns to a characteristically strange ending—the young man alone in the middle of the night, dancing on the pitching mound in an empty baseball stadium—the last words are a cry from the heart: " 'Oh God,' Yoshiya said aloud."

"Oh God." Is there a better response to Kobe, to Aum Shinrikyo, to 9/11?

John Wilson is editor of Books & Culture and editor-at-large for Christianity Today.

Copyright © 2002 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Subscribe to Christianity Today3 Risk-Free Trial Issues
Subscribe to Christianity Today magazine

Related Elsewhere:

Visit Books & Culture online at BooksandCulture.com or subscribe here.

Books & Culture Corner appears Mondays at ChristianityToday.com. Earlier Books & Culture Corners include:

How to Avoid the Coming Disaster | "Imitate Japan." "No, don't imitate Japan." Time out. (August 12, 2002)
"Mind Control" and the Christian Citizen | Historian Sean Wilentz's misguided attack on Justice Antonin Scalia. (August 5, 2002)
Speak What We Feel | Frederick Buechner's latest book is one of his best. (July 29, 2002)
The Great Inflatable Shark Hunt | A report from the Christian Booksellers Association convention in Anaheim. (July 22, 2002)
Why Evangelicals Can't Opt Out of Political Engagement | Remembering Jeremiah Evarts and Samuel Worcester. (July 19, 2002)
The Pledge Controversy | Asking the wrong questions? (July 8, 2002)
Reading Danny Pearl | How would the murdered journalist want to be remembered? (July 1, 2002)
A Cry for Help | Sudanese Christians gather in Houston and ask for U.S. support. (June 17, 2002)
Agrarians of the World, Unite! | Wendell Berry's vision, and how Christians should respond to it. (June 10, 2002)
Stop, Drop, and Cover … | Then hack your lungs out and die. (June 3, 2002)
Death of an Evolutionist | RIP Stephen Jay Gould. (May 31, 2002)
Closing The X-Files … | … with the sign of the Cross. (May 20, 2002)
And the Next Thing Is … | Marxism (or not). (May 13, 2002)
God Bless the Eliminator | Mother Jones magazine makes known a shocking discovery: evangelicals are sending missionaries to Muslim countries! (May 6, 2002)
'A Peculiar People' | The uniqueness of the Jews. (April 29, 2002)
'Nebuchadnezzar My Slave' | Was the Holocaust God's will? (April 15, 2002)
'In the Beginning Was the Holocaust'? | Blasphemy, rage, memory, and meaning of the Shoah. (April 8, 2002)
The Gospel According to Biff | A conversation with novelist Christopher Moore. (April 1, 2002)
Baseball 2002 Preview | Part 2: Saving the game? (March 25, 2002)
The State of the Game | After one of the best World Series ever, baseball faces a crisis. (March 18, 2002)
America's Homegrown Islam—and Its Prophet | The strange story of Elijah Muhammad, leader of the Nation of Islam and onetime mentor of Malcolm X. (Mar. 11, 2002)
'Must Be Superstition' | Rediscovering spiritual reality. (Mar. 4, 2002)


Read more... Read more from 'Books & Culture Corner'


Browse More Christianity Today
CT Home Page | Hot Issues | Faith & Thought | Churches & Ministry
Culture & Technology | World Report | Weblog | Columns
Message Boards | Archives | Contact Us


Christianity Today
Try 3 Issues of Christianity Today RISK-FREE!

Name
Street Address
City/State/Zip
E-mail Address

No credit card required. Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only. Click here for International orders.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.

Buy 1 gift subscription, get 1 FREE!

Subscribe to the FREE CT Newsletters
Get CT headlines direct to your mailbox!

CTDirect (daily)
CTWeekly










Christianity Online Web Content Filter
Seminary &
Grad School Guide
Search by Name


or use:
Advanced Search
to search by major, region, cost, affiliation, enrollment, more!

Search by Region
Northeast U. S.
Southeast U. S.
North Central U. S.
South Central U. S.
Northwest U. S.
Southwest U. S.
Canada/International


The Last Word

The Last Word

by N.T. Wright
Reg: $19.95
Now: $14.99


Discussing The Da Vinci Code, DVD Curriculum

Discussing The Da Vinci Code, DVD Curriculum

by Lee Strobel, Gary Poole
Reg: $19.99
Now: $11.99

Advertising

http://www.screenflex.com

http://www.fuller.edu/

http://www.dts.edu

http://www.denverseminary.edu/

http://www.mhgs.edu

http://www.christianbook.com/html/specialty/1007.html?p=1024959

http://www.acfona.org/index.asp?pageId=62

http://www.christianbook.com/html/specialty/1007.html?p=1024959

Christianity Online Web Content Filter
ChristianityToday.com
Home CT Mag Church/Ministry Bible/Life Communities Chat Entertainment Schools/Jobs Shopping Free! Help
Books & Culture
Christian History & Biography
Christianity Today
Church Law Today
Church Treasurer Alert
Ignite Your Faith
Leadership Journal
Marriage Partnership
Men of Integrity
MOMsense
Today's Christian
Today's Christian Woman
Your Church
ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
BuildingChurchLeaders.com
ChristianBibleStudies.com
Christian College Guide
Christian History Back Issues
Christian Music Today
Christianity Today Movies
Church Products & Services
Church Safety
ChurchSiteCreator.com
PreachingToday.com
PreachingTodaySermons.com
Seminary/Grad School Guide
Christianity Today International
www.ChristianityToday.com
Copyright © 1994–2006 Christianity Today International
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Job Openings