This is archived content from a previous version of this website. Please go to homepage to visit the new website.

A Shinagawa Monkey - Haruki Murakami in The New Yorker

The New Yorker, The Anniversary Issue, February 13 & 20, 2006

A fiction story by Haruki Murakami is illustrated with a photo by Tim Flach and one by Hellen van Meene. Because the magazine hardly contains photography - it is famous for its cartoons - the two photos feature quite prominently.

You can read the story here here (mirror, 57KB, PDF).

The New Yorker is an American magazine that publishes reportage, criticism, essays, cartoons, poetry, and fiction. [...] The New Yorker has a wide audience outside of New York thanks to the quality of its writing and journalism. [...] Its short humorous sketches, famous cartoons, and short stories have brought each of these literary forms to a higher level of literary esteem in the United States. [...] The New Yorker is noted for its stable of writers, journalists, contributors, and critics, all in the top of their fields.

source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_Yorker