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Page 15

by Makoto Shinkai


  “I started looking for you in your third life back.”

  Half a year later, Yojiro Noda of RADWIMPS sent over a demo of “Third Life Back,” the theme song. It was a fantastic track that will probably turn out to be epoch-making for RADWIMPS as well.

  “I’m so psyched that I’m out in a downpour getting soaked as I listen to it.”

  For some reason, that Line message from Shinkai almost made me cry.

  In this world, which is overflowing with encounters, it’s hard to find your soul mate. Even if you do find them, who’s going to prove to you that they really are your soul mate?

  Makoto Shinkai and Yojiro Noda wrote the story of a pair who keep missing each other in an endlessly big world.

  These two met as if guided by fate, and the result was a miraculous collaboration (even if it was triggered by a pub under the train tracks).

  Makoto Shinkai wrote the story and script, Yojiro Noda picked them up and expanded them as music, and together, they became this book. In addition, although the movie is nearly finished, because this book was written, it’s filling out even more. Seriously, how was this production so lucky?

  “I’m not going to write a novel this time.”

  That’s what Shinkai said, but Yojiro Noda’s music made him write it.

  It’s not possible to play audio in novels, but I can hear RADWIMPS’s songs from this one.

  I think it’s a rare book, the product of a fateful encounter.

  In 2012, I wrote a novel called If Cats Disappeared from the World.

  It was a portrait of a dying postman.

  I thought I was writing about death, but at some point, it turned into a story about memories.

  What is the cruelest thing, as far as people are concerned? Death, naturally. That’s what I always thought.

  However, there’s something that’s crueler than death.

  It’s forgetting the person you love while you’re alive.

  Where do human memories live?

  Are they in the synaptic circuitry of the brain? Do retinas and fingertips hold memories, too? Or is there an invisible, amorphous, mistlike, spiritual collective somewhere, and that’s where the memories reside? Something we’d call the heart or the mind or the soul. Is it something you can take out and stick back in, like a memory card with an OS on it?

  In the book, Taki wonders to himself about this.

  Humans are mysterious creatures. We forget the important things, and all we remember are the things that don’t matter. Unlike memory cards, we don’t have the ability to keep the important stuff and delete what we don’t need. I always wondered why that was.

  However, now that I’ve read this book, I feel as if I understand, just a little.

  People forget the important things.

  That said, by resisting, by struggling against that, they gain life.

  your name., a movie that tells the love story of a boy and girl “struggling, magnificently” in this cruel world, will be completed very shortly. Without a doubt, it’s going to be “Makoto Shinkai’s best film”— No, let me rephrase that. The world is about to meet “Makoto Shinkai’s ultimate masterpiece.”

  Now, with the same feelings as the people who’ve read this novel, I’m looking forward to my encounter with that movie from the bottom of my heart.

  (Film producer and novelist)

  Thank you for buying this ebook, published by Yen On.

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