OVIEDO, Spain (AP) โ For Japanese author Haruki Murakami, the bloody conflict in the Gaza Strip is a horrendous example of how our world is divided by walls, both physical and metaphorical.
But while admitting he can only pray for peace now, he also feels confident that fiction, rather than offering an escape, can help us understand, and survive, increasingly perilous times.
โI have Jewish friends in Israel. And Iโm also aware that the Palestinian situation that I saw when I visited Israel is miserable,โ Murakami told The Associated Press in an interview. โSo all I can say is to pray so that peace will prevail as soon as possible. I cannot say which (side) is right or wrong.โ

The clash between Israel and the Hamas militant group has resonated with the title of Murakami's newest novel โThe City and Its Uncertain Walls,โ which was published in Japanese this year and has yet to be translated into English.
โIn my novels, walls are real walls. But of course they are also metaphoric walls at the same time,โ the 74-year-old writer said. โFor me, walls are very meaningful things. Iโm a bit claustrophobic. If Iโm locked up in a cramped space I may have a mild panic. So I often think about walls."
โWhen I visited Berlin, the wall was still there. โWhen I visited Israel and saw that 6-meter-high (19.7-foot-high) wall, I was kind of terrified," he added.
Murakami spoke to the AP this week before he received Spainโs Princess of Asturias prize for literature in the northern Spanish city of Oviedo. Friday's gala will be presided over by Princess Leonor de Borbรณn, the heir to Spain's King Felipe VI. The 50,000-euro award ($52,900) is one of eight prizes covering the arts, communication, science and other areas that are handed out annually by the Princess of Asturias foundation.

The awardโs jury highlighted Murakamiโs โability to reconcile Japanese tradition and the legacy of Western culture in an ambitious and innovative narrative.โ
In his memoir on being a writer, โNovelist As a Vocation,โ Murakami lays out his theory of โnovelistic intelligence,โ whereby writers, and readers, learn through fiction to avoid rash judgements and to accept โ just like many of the protagonists in his novels and stories โ that conclusive answers to real-life questions of love and loss are rarely found.
Reflecting on wisdom that is fostered by fiction, Murakami said that while journalism and breaking analysis of world events are necessary, โwe also need metaphorical and slow informationโ to make sense of our reality, which is being quickly transformed by new technologies, while still riveted by apparently timeless religious and national conflicts.
โFor instance, there is fake news. I think it is right to challenge that with fiction. I think that would be the power of novels,โ he said. โFake news has a slim chance of winning its fight against the truth. People who have acquired true stories can certainly see through lies.โ

Murakamiโs distinctive writing style, which combines an intimate narrative voice with surreal happenings navigated by vulnerable yet resilient protagonists, has won over millions of readers in Japan and around the globe. His novels, short-story collections and essays have sold millions of copies and been translated into over 40 languages.
Murakamiโs 1987 novel โNorwegian Wood,โ which took a more realistic approach to a story of reminiscing on young love, turned him into a star in Japan. His other novels that have triumphed globally include the enigmatic โThe Wind-Up Bird Chronicle,โ โKafka on the Shore,โ โAfter Darkโ and โ1Q84.โ
His most recent short-story collection, โFirst Person Singular,โ brings together tales about a talking monkey who steals names, a non-existent album by jazz musician Charlie Parker, and a yarn that features humorous yet moving poems on baseball, among others in another display of his wildly creative imagination.
Murakami has been considered for years one of the writers who could win the Nobel Prize for Literature. But it has yet to fall his way, often going to writers with smaller readerships, like this yearโs winner, Norwegian Jon Fosse.
When asked if he minded being passed over, Murakami said he takes a stoic approach, only worrying about what is in his control: his own writing.
โBasically, I have a policy of not paying very much attention to prizes. Itโs because (prizes) are decided based on someone elseโs judgment. Iโm interested in things in which I can make my own decisions,โ he said. โSo of course Iโm honored to receive this (Princesa de Asturias) award, but itโs only a result. After all, the most wonderful thing is to be able to tell your own story.โ
Murakami, who is an avid long-distance runner and has written about his need to be physically fit to endure long days tied to a desk, said he was still going strong despite his advanced age.
Currently, he is taking a break between books to recharge his creative batteries before delving into a new project.
โIโm already 74 years old, and I donโt know how many novels I can still write. So whatever I write, I will write it with great care,โ he said.
And what if a digital โauthorโ โ a computer using artificial intelligence โ were to challenge our monopoly on creative writing?
For Murakami, that wonโt happen. His prodigious mind, he believes, still has the upper hand over any such copy since his convoluted stories only suggest meanings through the clouds of the unknown that surround his characters.
โWhen Iโm writing a novel, my head is filled with bugs, but I still write novels using the brain,โ he said. โIf a computer was filled with as many bugs as I have, I think (it) would break down.โ
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AP writer Mari Yamaguchi contributed to this report from Tokyo.