The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle: The Problem of Evil
Amazon reviewer Kevin Salfen goes deeper:
In a sense, then, “Wind-up Bird” is a classic love triangle, but it has been made archetypal: the defiled is fought over between the defiler and the purifier. Because of its reduction to the archetypal, all defiled characters are functionally the same, and all defilers are functionally the same.
In my last post on the Wind-Up Bird, I sketched the novel in broad terms, observing its circular structure. There is plenty more to this book, including, as Salfen observes, the problem of evil.
While I would usually resist lumping characters together in broad categories, as Salfen has done, it makes sense in The Wind-Up Bird given its similarities between characters. ‘Archetype’ is an accurate word for the broad, shared existence of the characters both present and past.
Something else that needs to be covered is how these archetypes determine the characters’ behavior. At one point in the novel, Nutmeg describes the lack of control she has over her own life this way:
“I feel as if my every move is being controlled by some kind of incredibly long arm that’s reaching out from somewhere far away, and that my life has been nothing more than a convenient passageway for all these things moving throught it” (503).
But that’s for another day—or the comment section.