+ Follow KAFKA TAMURA Tag
Array
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[results] => Array
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[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 302098
[Title] => Japanese bizarro world fiction
[Summary] => KAFKA ON THE SHORE
By Haruki Murakami
Knopf Books, 436 pages
Available at Powerbooks
[DatePublished] => 2005-10-16 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 136008
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1804693
[AuthorName] => Scott R. Garceau
[SectionName] => Sunday Lifestyle
[SectionUrl] => sunday-life
[URL] =>
)
[1] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 268680
[Title] => Kafka on the Shore, Rubiks on my mind
[Summary] => This may be revealing my age (and more), but those who remember the Rubiks Cube, the toy that became such a craze sometime in the late 1970s, I personally felt that while the cube afforded the individual hours of mind-testing diversion and even enjoyment, there was at best a mind-numbing quality to the manner in which individuals would obsess while playing with the toy. In certain ways, it was a precursor to the concentration and dogged determination with which kids of today apply themselves for hours on end to their PlayStation and GameBoy.
[DatePublished] => 2005-02-14 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 133272
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1805321
[AuthorName] => Philip Cu-Unjieng
[SectionName] => Arts and Culture
[SectionUrl] => arts-and-culture
[URL] =>
)
)
)
KAFKA TAMURA
Array
(
[results] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 302098
[Title] => Japanese bizarro world fiction
[Summary] => KAFKA ON THE SHORE
By Haruki Murakami
Knopf Books, 436 pages
Available at Powerbooks
[DatePublished] => 2005-10-16 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 136008
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1804693
[AuthorName] => Scott R. Garceau
[SectionName] => Sunday Lifestyle
[SectionUrl] => sunday-life
[URL] =>
)
[1] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 268680
[Title] => Kafka on the Shore, Rubiks on my mind
[Summary] => This may be revealing my age (and more), but those who remember the Rubiks Cube, the toy that became such a craze sometime in the late 1970s, I personally felt that while the cube afforded the individual hours of mind-testing diversion and even enjoyment, there was at best a mind-numbing quality to the manner in which individuals would obsess while playing with the toy. In certain ways, it was a precursor to the concentration and dogged determination with which kids of today apply themselves for hours on end to their PlayStation and GameBoy.
[DatePublished] => 2005-02-14 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 133272
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1805321
[AuthorName] => Philip Cu-Unjieng
[SectionName] => Arts and Culture
[SectionUrl] => arts-and-culture
[URL] =>
)
)
)
abtest