69 (novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Originaltitle69 sixty nine
LanguageJapanese
69
First English language edition
AuthorRyu Murakami
Original title69 sixty nine
TranslatorRalph F. McCarthy
LanguageJapanese
GenreRoman à clef, Novel
Published1987 (Kodansha Europe) (Eng. trans.)
Publication placeJapan
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages192 pp (Eng. trans first edition, hardback)
ISBN4-7700-1736-7 (Eng. trans first edition, hardback)
OCLC28549113
895.6/35 20
LC ClassPL856.U696 S4813 1993

69 (シクスティナイン, Shikusutinain) is a roman à clef novel by Ryu Murakami. It was published first in 1987. It takes place in 1969, and tells the story of some high school students coming of age in an obscure Japanese city who try to mimic the counter-culture movements taking place in Tokyo and other parts of the world.

Thirty-two-year-old narrator Kensuke Yazaki takes a nostalgic look back at the year 1969, when he was an ambitious and enthusiastic seventeen-year-old, living in Sasebo, in Nagasaki, where he gets into antics with his equally ambitious and enthusiastic best friends, Iwase and Adama. Their priorities are girls, cinema, music, literature, pop culture, organizing a school festival to be called "The Morning Erection Festival", besting teachers and enemies, and finding a way to change the world somehow.

Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

Release details

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI