How Many Pages Are In 'No Longer'?

2026-06-06 08:58:27 70
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3 Answers

Mason
Mason
2026-06-08 06:27:00
'No Longer Human' is one of those books that feels longer than it actually is—not because it drags, but because every page lingers. My copy's 176 pages, but I swear I highlighted half of them. The way Dazai writes about self-destruction is so uncomfortably relatable; you start noticing parallels in your own life.

Funny thing: the page count barely matters. It's the kind of book you either binge in one sitting or ration over months because it hits too close to home. If someone asks how long it took to read, the real answer isn't in pages—it's in how many existential crises it triggered.
Xavier
Xavier
2026-06-08 17:33:52
I recently picked up 'No Longer Human' by Osamu Dazai (sometimes just called 'No Longer'), and I was surprised by how slim the physical copy felt. My edition clocks in at around 170 pages, but it packs a punch way heavier than its page count suggests. The prose is sparse but devastating—every sentence feels like a hammer to the chest. It's one of those books where you finish a chapter and have to put it down just to breathe.

Different translations and editions might vary slightly—I've seen some with 160 pages, others pushing 180—but the core experience stays the same. It's a quick read technically, but emotionally? You'll need weeks to recover. The way Dazai captures alienation makes it feel like he's whispering secrets directly to your soul.
Ella
Ella
2026-06-11 22:30:24
If we're talking about the original Japanese version of 'No Longer Human,' it's part of a larger collection in some prints, but standalone editions usually run about 160–190 pages. What's wild is how much existential dread gets crammed into that small space! The book's protagonist, Yozo, feels so real that by page 30, you're already invested in his downward spiral.

I compared three different translations once—Penguin Classics, New Directions, and a vintage Japanese paperback—and the page counts differed by maybe 15 pages max. The newer translations sometimes add intro essays or footnotes that bulk it up slightly. But honestly, the raw core of the story stays lean and merciless. It's like a razor blade disguised as literature.
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