Sayaka Murata's 'Convenience Store Woman' Surpasses 3 Million Copies Worldwide! New Wraparound Band Revealed.
Sayaka Murata's novel 'Convenience Store Woman' has exceeded 3 million copies worldwide, receiving widespread acclaim from major media outlets in the US and UK and sparking a global boom in Japanese literature.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: April 3, 2026 at 15:30
- 🔍 Collected: April 3, 2026 at 07:00
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 21, 2026 at 04:54 (429h 54m after Collected)
Sayaka Murata's 'Convenience Store Woman' (Bunshun Bunko), which has been translated in 46 countries and regions around the world (as of today), has surpassed 3 million copies cumulatively worldwide, and 2 million copies in Japan alone.
What is 'normal'?
A story for you, who has ever felt even a slight discomfort with society's standards———
The story of Keiko Furukura, a woman in her 18th year working part-time at a convenience store, is generating a vortex of shock and empathy around the world.
When the English version was published in 2018, book reviews were successively published in major media such as the UK newspaper , the US newspaper , and the US magazine . It was also selected as a 'Best Book 2018' by magazine.
In November of last year, a special feature on this work was broadcasted on NHK News 'Ohayo Nippon' (aired November 4, 2025) as 'the work that publishing insiders consider the spark of the Japanese literature boom around the world', causing a huge response.
Now, its momentum is unstoppable even domestically, winning first place on the era-specific chart 'Hot Heisei Books' compiled by Billboard JAPAN (charts published 3/19 and 3/26). (https://www.billboard-japan.com/charts/detail?a=heiseibooks&year=2026&month=03&day=31)
◼︎ Introduction to the Work Contents
36 years old, unmarried, no boyfriend. Keiko Furukura, in her 18th year working part-time at a convenience store.
Eating convenience store food every day, working the cash register even in her dreams,
she can only become a cog in the world's wheel when she is a 'store clerk'.
'Welcome!!'
Not losing to the sounds made by customers, she raises her voice again today.
One day, a new male employee, Shiraha, who is looking for a marriage partner, arrives and confronts her, saying that such a convenience store-like way of living is shameful.