Murakami also has a great fascination for borders, boundaries and meeting points for two opposing realities. Often these two realities converge, only to reveal the truth of not just the narrator’s life, but also of life itself. But before this convergence takes place, the narrator goes through a thorough upheaval that overthrows the apparent balance of his reality.
In Killing Commendatore, not one, but three events lead the narrator to a dizzying journey of self-discovery. The first event takes place immediately after he moves to the famous Japanese painter Tomohiko Amada’s house as a tenant. Hidden in the attic, with only a sleeping horned owl for company, he discovers an unknown painting of Tomohiko titled ‘Killing Commendatore’. He is struck by the violent nature of the painting which portrays a scene from Mozart’s opera Don Giovanni, except rendered in Japanese watercolours where the characters are dressed in the fashion of the Asuka period. The narrator soon becomes obsessed with the painting and spends hours on end simply staring at it. He also begins reading more about Tomohiko who, after studying Western-style painting in Vienna, re-emerged as a Japanese-style artist after the Second World War. This contrast between Western and Japanese art is one the recurring motifs of the book.
Between teaching classes at the local art school, occasionally sleeping with some women and staring at the painting ‘Killing Commendatore’, the narrator accepts a portrait commission from Menshiki, a mysterious, extremely rich, Jaguar-driving neighbour. The process of painting this enigmatic man with his amazingly white hair and firm handshake helps him recover from his artist’s block and bring to life his own unique style. He discerns a solitude hidden behind Menshiki’s handsome, smiling face. Before the narrator discovers Menshiki’s hidden agenda, every night, at the exact same time, the protagonist hears the ringing of a bell from a strange circular pit in the woods. These are the three catalysts that usher our narrator into a slippery reality as things ripple out of control. Soon the narrator comes to realise that it is not just the physical world around him that has gone awry, but his consciousness has also entered a strange realm with no strong foothold: “Like the objects and events in constant flux, or perhaps in opposition to them, what should have been a fixed yardstick inside the framework of my memory seemed instead to be in perpetual motion.”
Much like Japanese paintings, Murakami’s writing is enchantingly rich in symbolism and metaphor. Take, for instance, his description of the house where the narrator is living: “The house was built right on the boundary line, so often it would be sunny out in front while heavy rain fell in back. At first I found this disconcerting, but as I got used to it, it came to seem natural.”
You might wonder what makes Killing Commendatore different from Murakami’s earlier books. Has he reached that dreaded point of a successful career where every new piece of writing is a rehashing of previous works? Despite the many recurring motifs, Killing Commendatore has a unique plot and many new themes that make it a pure delight to read. Intimacy, pleasure, solitude, freedom, love, free will and faith are some of its most important themes.
The notion that Ideas have an independent life of their own is another strong narrative as well as thematic element, which sets the novel apart from Murakami’s previous works. “Ideas possess nothing like morality. Ideas are an entirely neutral concept, neither good nor bad. It all depends on how humans use them. In which case Ideas can have a beneficial effect in some cases, and a negative effect in others.”
Killing Commendatore is, at its core, about the melancholic nature of the creative process and the idea that artistic creation is a sort of exchange between the subject and the painter. Moreover, Murakami’s detailed analysis of the difference between traditional Japanese painting and modern European painting is among the highlights of the book. Japanese painting excels at the use of blank space that accentuates that which was indeed painted. Murakami’s novels, in a somewhat similar fashion, leave plenty unsaid. However, that lends to the complex beauty of his writing.
The reviewer is an Ankara-based freelance writer
Killing Commendatore
By Haruki Murakami
Penguin, India
ISBN: 978-1787300194
681pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, December 30th, 2018