Norwegian Wood is about a story of a person called Toru, a peaceful, independent Japanese undergrad, who begins to fall in love with Naoko after Kizuki (Naoko's sweetheart and Toru's closest companion) commits suicide. While it would appear to be actually remedial for Toru and Naoko to swing to each other for comfort despite such catastrophe, Naoko is overpowered with her life's weights and Kizuki grief and hence rejects Toru's friendship for the isolation she finds inside of her own contracting and separated world. Additionally lamenting for Kizuki while becoming lonelier. The rejected Toru reluctantly contacts Midori, a candid and sexually confident young lady who is everything that Naoko can't be (Murakami 13).
The novel Norwegian Wood is a novel seemingly written in the emotional fog of Toru Watanabe, who walks slowly
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Related to Toru's battle are occasions of Japan's history as it harmonizes with the novel's setting. Watanabe notices that he is not certain regardless of whether he will completely recall Naoko. He expresses that he is now overlooking and forgetting her and that he is worried about the possibility that this overlooking means that there are numerous other basic things that he has overlooked and forgotten. It is pivotal to comprehension the story and how Watanabe can go about his life even after such a large number of individuals near him that have conferred suicide. The best inconvenience in the lives of Toru was begun by women. Toru loses his self after the death of Naoko. The weakness of fault and love toward Naoko lead him to contemplate around without the particular destination. This show of residency exhibits his instable state of his