The Elephant Vanishes

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The Elephant Vanishes (象の消滅 Zō no shōmetsu?) is a collection of short stories by Japanese author Haruki Murakami. The stories were written between 1983 and 1990, and the collection's first English publication was in 1993. Several of the stories originally appeared (often with alternate translations) in the magazines The New Yorker, Playboy, and The Magazine (Mobil Corp.) before this compilation was published.

Stylistically and thematically, the collection aligns with Murakami's previous work. The stories mesh normality with surrealism, and focus on painful issues involving loss, destruction, confusion and loneliness. The title for the book is derived from the final story in the collection.

[edit] Contents

Story title Originally published in
The Wind-up Bird And Tuesday's Women The New Yorker; updated subsequently as the first chapter of The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
The Second Bakery Attack Playboy
The Kangaroo Communique
On Seeing the 100% Perfect Girl One Beautiful April Morning
Sleep The New Yorker
The Fall of the Roman Empire, The 1881 Indian Uprising, Hitler's Invasion of Poland, And The Realm of Raging Winds The Magazine (Mobil Corp.)
Lederhosen
Barn Burning The New Yorker
The Little Green Monster
A Family Affair
A Window
TV People The New Yorker
A Slow Boat to China
The Dancing Dwarf
The Last Lawn of the Afternoon
The Silence
The Elephant Vanishes The New Yorker

[edit] Additional publication

While the list above details which stories appeared before the publication of The Elephant Vanishes, many of the stories have also appeared elsewhere more recently:

In other languages