
Murata takes a childlike idea and holds onto it with imaginative fervor, brilliantly exposing the callousness and arbitrariness of convention." – New Yorker "What does it mean to feel at home in the world? Natskui, the protagonist of this startling novel, doesn't know: from a young age, she's convinced that she has been contacted by aliens who will take her away from a middle-class Japanese life marked by cruelty. The strength of voice lies in the faux-naïf lens through which she filters her dark view of humankind: We earthlings are sad, truncated bots, shuffling through the world in a dream of confusion." –Lydia Millet, New York Times Book Review The characters define themselves not by a specific notion of what they are–other–but by a general idea of what they are not: humans/breeders. In Earthlings, being an alien is a simple proxy for being alienated. Reminiscent of certain excellent folk tales, expressionless prose is Murata's trademark. "To Sayaka Murata, nonconformity is a slippery slope. Named a Most Anticipated Book by the New York Times, TIME, USA Today, Entertainment Weekly, the Guardian, Vulture, Wired, Literary Hub, Bustle, PopSugar, and Refinery29


Named a Best Book of the Year by the New York Times, TIME and Literary Hub Later, as a grown woman, living a quiet life with her asexual husband, Natsuki is still pursued by dark shadows from her childhood, and decides to flee the “baby factory” of society for good, searching for answers about the vast and frightening mysteries of the universe–answers only Natsuki has the power to uncover.ĭreamlike, sometimes shocking, and always strange and wonderful, Earthlings asks what it means to be happy in a stifling world, and cements Sayaka Murata’s status as a master chronicler of the outsider experience and our own uncanny universe.Ī New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice

One summer, on vacation with her family and her cousin Yuu in her grandparents’ ramshackle wooden house in the mountains of Nagano, Natsuki decides that she must be an alien, which would explain why she can’t seem to fit in like everyone else. He tells her that he has come from the planet Popinpobopia on a special quest to help her save the Earth. Her parents favor her sister, and her best friend is a plush toy hedgehog named Piyyut, who talks to her. Now, in Earthlings, Sayaka Murata pushes at the boundaries of our ideas of social conformity in this brilliantly imaginative, intense, and absolutely unforgettable novel.Īs a child, Natsuki doesn’t fit in with her family. Sayaka Murata’s Convenience Store Woman was one of the most unusual and refreshing bestsellers of recent years, depicting the life of a thirty-six-year-old clerk in a Tokyo convenience store. From the beloved author of cult sensation Convenience Store Woman, which has now sold more than one million copies worldwide and has been translated into thirty-three languages, comes a spellbinding and otherworldly novel about a woman who believes she is an alien
