This was one of my top reads of 2016; I read it as an e-book, and just had to pick up the actual physical book.
This was one of my top reads of 2016; I read it as an e-book, and just had to pick up the actual physical book.
A novelist drives up to Fukushima, where he grew up, after the 3.11 tsunami. He's preoccupied by the brothers at the heart of his latest novel, set in Fukushima, and suddenly one of them materializes in his car and jabbers away. This slippery memoir-novel-essay meanders Murakami-like through the history of the samurai and of horses in Japan, in a narrative that won't sit still. Get ready to be discombobulated: you're in for a hell of a ride.
This is mesmerizing. Furukawa is a novelist preoccupied with (decentered) history, grieving to the point of writer's block a month after the 2011 tsunami in his home area Fukushima and, in the middle of this memoir, the main character from his earlier novel shows up, by which I mean he materializes in the rental car Furukawa and his fellow writers are driving, and starts engaging him in dialogue...
An enigmatic opening to this novel ("a fusion of fiction, history, and memoir") I've just just begun, about the Fukushima tsunami. (Never mind the gorgeous title!)