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Article # : 16916 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 4 / 1990  2,940 Words
Author : Jay Rubin
Jay Rubin is professor of Japanese literature at the University of Washington in Seattle, author of Injurious to Public Morals: Writers and the Meiji State (1984), and translator of two novels by Soseki Natsume.

       A WILD SHEEP CHASE
       Haruki Murakami, translated by Alfred Birnbaum
       Tokyo and New York: Kodansha International, 1989
       263 pp., $18.95
       
        I used to feel grateful to the Seattle Times for carrying Dave Barry's column since they were obviously doing it just for me. That particular brand of off-the-wall humor couldn't possibly appeal to anyone else. Then I found out that Dave Barry had won the Pulitzer Prize and is read by millions of people, many of whom are nearly sane.
       
        Take Dave's recent column on male obsessions with sports, for example, in which he reveals that large numbers of apparently normal men spend many of their waking hours "managing PRETEND BASEBALL TEAMS." Dave remarks: "This is crazy, right? If these guys said they were managing herds of pretend caribou, the authorities would be squirting lithium down their throats with turkey basters, right? And yet well all act like it's PERFECTLY NORMAL."
       
        Dave Barry can actually make a living writing commentary like this because something in his brain produces those caribou out of thin air, taking us completely by surprise in a way that turns on the laughter switch. We don't ask him where the caribou come from or what they symbolize: We just enjoy laughing at the sheer outrageousness of his imaginative leaps.
       
        We look for similar comic boldness from Woody Allen, Kurt Vonnegut, John Irving, and others, but not from Japanese writers - until ... (1978 of 16713 Characters)
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