Initially, I hit a point where I just couldn't get into reading this book; in part because of my opinion that the third Mistborn book was rather mediocre. In true Sanderson fashion though, by the time I hit the midpoint of the book I simply couldn't put it down. It was a fun, quick read once that happened. I surprised myself with this book in that I don't read much steampunk/western-fantasy, it was actually good!
I enjoyed most of this book. In particular, I found its take on magic and the world as it was described intriguing and original. The first book in the trilogy I would highly recommend.
Unfortunately, I felt the story of the third book a bit muddled. Hurried in some aspects and drawn out in others. And the parts that were drawn out almost caused me to not finish the series. All that said though, I still felt that it was an interesting read and would recommend it to others.
I don't usually read much in the way of fiction, always preferring the fantastical to the mundane, but I have to give credit where credit is due, and Haruki Murakami definitely delivers in The Wind-Up Bird Chronicles. Each character, including the cat, seem to be well defined and at the same time oddly aloof. Their interconnectedness brings the otherwise disparate story lines into one powerful, cohesive, and utterly riveting plot.