
One Hundred Years of Solitude
by Gabriel García Márquez (1967)
Like The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, this book masterfully blends the mundane with the magical.

by Haruki Murakami (1994)
apan's most highly regarded novelist now vaults into the first ranks of international fiction writers with this heroically imaginative novel, which is at once a detective story, an account of a disintegrating marriage, and an excavation of the buried secrets of World War II. In a Tokyo suburb a young man named Toru Okada searches for his wife's missing cat. Soon he finds himself looking for his wife as well in a netherworld that lies beneath the placid surface of Tokyo. As these searches intersect, Okada encounters a bizarre group of allies and antagonists: a psychic prostitute; a malevolent yet mediagenic politician; a cheerfully morbid sixteen-year-old-girl; and an aging war veteran who has been permanently changed by the hideous things he witnessed during Japan's forgotten campaign in Manchuria. Gripping, prophetic, suffused with comedy and menace, The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle is a tour de force equal in scope to the masterpieces of Mishima and Pynchon.
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by Gabriel García Márquez (1967)
Like The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, this book masterfully blends the mundane with the magical.

by Yukio Mishima (1963)
Shares The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle's exploration of disillusionment and the uncanny.

by Han Kang (2000)
Echoes The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle's surrealism and descent into the bizarre.

by Mikhail Bulgakov (1918)
Like The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, it features a surreal narrative with philosophical undertones.

by Kazuo Ishiguro (2005)
Shares The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle's quiet introspection and underlying sense of unease.
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