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Losing Kei
By Suzanne Kamata. 2007
A young mother fights impossible odds to be reunited with her child in this acutely insightful first novel about an…
intercultural marriage gone terribly wrong.Jill Parker is an American painter living in Japan. Far from the trendy gaijin neighborhoods of downtown Tokyo, she's settled in a remote seaside village where she makes ends meet as a bar hostess. Her world appears to open when she meets Yusuke, a savvy and sensitive art gallery owner who believes in her talent. But their love affair, and subsequent marriage, is doomed to a life of domestic hell, for Yusuke is the chonan, the eldest son, who assumes the role of rigid patriarch in his traditional family while Jill's duty is that of a servile Japanese wife. A daily battle of wills ensues as Jill resists instruction in the proper womanly arts. Even the long-anticipated birth of a son, Kei, fails to unite them. Divorce is the only way out, but in Japan a foreigner has no rights to custody, and Jill must choose between freedom and abandoning her child.Told with tenderness, humor, and an insider's knowledge of contemporary Japan, Losing Kei is the debut novel of an exceptional expatriate voice. Suzanne Kamata's work has appeared in over one hundred publications. She is the editor of The Broken Bridge: Fiction from Expatriates in Literary Japan and a forthcoming anthology from Beacon Press on parenting children with disabilities. A five-time nominee for the Pushcart Prize, she has twice won the Nippon Airways/Wingspan Fiction Contest.Three Generations
By Yu Young-Nan, Yom Sang-Seop. 2005
Touted as one of Korea's most important works of fiction, Three Generations (published in 1931 as a serial in Chosun…
Ilbo) charts the tensions in the Jo family in 1930s Japanese occupied Seoul. Yom's keenly observant eye reveals family tensions withprofound insight. Delving deeply into each character's history and beliefs, he illuminates the diverse pressures and impulses driving each. This Korean classic, often compared to Junichiro Tanizaki's The Makioka Sisters, reveals the country's situation under Japanese rule, the traditional Korean familial structure, and the battle between the modern and the traditional. The long-awaited publication of this masterpiece is a vital addition to Korean literature in English.Una noche en el Orient Express
By Veronica Henry. 2013
Un recado misterioso una promesa hecha a un amigo moribundo una propuesta inesperada un secreto que…
se remonta toda una vida Seis historias cuyo rumbo cambiar en un extraordinario viaje de Londres a Venecia Mientras el tren marcha salen a la luz relaciones confesiones y revelaciones Cuando los pasajeros lleguen a su destino su vida no volver a ser la misma www sumadeletras comThe Penguin's Song
By Marilyn Booth, Hassan Daoud. 2014
"I loved this book when I read it in Arabic. The Penguin's Song is a classic novel of the Lebanese…
civil war."--Rabih Alameddine, author of An Unnecessary Woman"In The Penguin's Song, a city falls, a father dies, two women walk the same road over and over, a boy with a broken body dreams of love. Like Agota Kristof's Notebook Trilogy, this spare yet lyrical parable tells us more about exile, loss and the wearing away of hope than most us want to know. I love this beautiful book."--Rebecca Brown, author of American Romances and The End of Youth"Daoud's novel is an elegiac account of loneliness and separation. . . . This is a haunting story inhabited by the ghosts of past lives and demolished buildings, where desires are left unfulfilled and loneliness sweeps through every soul."--Publishers Weekly"Daoud's claustrophobic novel hauntingly conveys one family's isolation after being relocated during the Lebanese civil war. . . . Daoud's evocation of history as it is experienced is excellent. His characters live through momentous events, but their struggles to survive land them in a kind of purgatory. A novel that defies expectations as it summons up the displacement and dehumanization that can come with war."--Kirkus Reviews" . . . deftly explores how people cope with the aftermath of war and the tremendous struggle of rebuilding not only with bricks and concrete but with heart, hopes, and dreams."--Lisa Rohrbaugh, Leetonia Community P.L., OH, and Library Journal"Nothing about reading Hassan Daoud's novels is easy, but the effort is always rewarded. The complex but mundane beauty of his prose is skillfully rendered in Marilyn Booth's translation, The Penguin's Song, a novel as much about the dreary loneliness of daily life as it is about the Lebanese civil war and its aftermath. Slowly paced, heavy with the burden of waiting, Daoud's text unfolds painstakingly, page after page. The horror of war, the pain of isolation, the longing of unfulfilled desire, and the power of the printed word all shine through in this finely-crafted narrative."--Michelle Hartman, Institute of Islamic Studies, McGill UniversityAs war wreaks havoc on the historic heart of Beirut, tenants of the old city are pushed to the margins and obliged to live on the surrounding hillsides, where it seems they will stay forever, waiting. The dream of return becomes a way of life in the unending time of war."The Penguin" is a physically deformed young man who lives with his aging mother and father in one of the "temporary" buildings. His father spends his days on the balcony of their apartment, looking at the far-off city and pining for his lost way of life. Mother and father both find their purpose each day in worrying about the future for their son, while he spends his time in an erotic fantasy world, centered on a young woman who lives in the apartment below. Poverty and family crisis go hand in hand as the young man struggles with his isolation and unfulfilled sexual longing.Voted "The Best Arabic Novel of the Year" when it was first published, The Penguin's Song is a finely wrought parable of how one can live out an entire life in the dream of returning to another.Vertigo
By Michael Hulse, W. G. Sebald. 2001
The beguiling first novel by W. G. Sebald, one of the most enormously acclaimed European writers of our time. Vertigo,…
W. G. Sebald's first novel, never before translated into English, is perhaps his most amazing and certainly his most alarming. Sebald--the acknowledged master of memory's uncanniness--takes the painful pleasures of unknowability to new intensities in Vertigo. Here in their first flowering are the signature elements of Sebald's hugely acclaimed novels The Emigrants and The Rings of Saturn. An unnamed narrator, beset by nervous ailments, is again our guide on a hair-raising journey through the past and across Europe, amid restless literary ghosts--Kafka, Stendhal, Casanova. In four dizzying sections, the narrator plunges the reader into vertigo, into that "swimming of the head," as Webster's defines it: in other words, into that state so unsettling, so fascinating, and so "stunning and strange," as The New York Times Book Review declared about The Emigrants, that it is "like a dream you want to last forever."A Voyage to the Island of the Articoles
By Andre Maurois. 2012
"Dangerous, charming, and funny, this elegant miniature rediscovery will delight even brilliant minds."-Simon Van BooyAndré Maurois' novella, published in the…
same year as Margaret Mead's Coming of Age in Samoa, is about a couple who become shipwrecked on an uncharted South Seas Island and discover a race of literary zealots for whom every subject and feeling needs to be expressed as a form of literary art. As explained by Alberto Manguel, "An Articole will publish not only his Intimate Journal, but also his Journal of My Intimate Journal; and his wife will publish My Husband's Journal of His Intimate Journal."Any Deadly Thing
By Roy Kesey. 2013
Following the critical success of his debut collection, All Over, and of his debut novel, Pacazo, Roy Kesey now brings…
us a new gathering of short stories, Any Deadly Thing. These stories first appeared in magazines including McSweeney's, Subtropics, Ninth Letter and American Short Fiction, and have been widely anthologized; among them are winners of a Pushcart Prize special mention, an Honorable Mention in The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror, and The Missouri Review's Jeffrey E. Smith Editors' Prize in Fiction. With story locales ranging across the Americas to Europe and Asia, Kesey once again makes the full strange world his stage. "Perfect, masterful portraits of an international cross-section of wise, broken souls--hopeful, brutal, funny as hell, and heart-crushing, every last one." -Elizabeth Crane, author of We Only Know So Much "Roy Kesey is one of my favorite contemporary writers, and Any Deadly Thing is another triumph. These stories, reminiscent of William Gass in the remarkable way they combine a virtuoso playfulness and wit with an atmosphere of grimness and grief and heartbreak, range the world over for their brilliantly realized locales, but they share a deeper setting in what Gass calls 'the only holiness we have,' human consciousness. Kesey demonstrates once again that he is a spectacularly deft and empathetic priest of that creed, which is the only one for me." -Michael Griffith, author of TrophyMulberry and Peach
By Sau-Ling Wong, Hualing Nieh. 1981
This extraordinary novel tells the story of two women-Mulberry and Peach-who are really one. Mulberry is a young Chinese-American woman…
who has fled the turmoil of postwar China to settle in the United States. Unable to forget the terrors she has witnessed or to resolve the conflicts between her new life and her old, she copes by developing a second personality: the fearless, tough-talking, sexually uninhibited Peach. While Mulberry clings to her cultural and ethical roots, Peach renounces her past to embrace the American way of life with a vengeance. These two women-both in flight-speak to their readers through an innovative narrative structure, combining journal entries, interior dialogue, letters, poetry, and myth. Mulberry's past-mainly her experiences during the Japanese occupation of China and the years of civil war between Communists and Nationalists-haunts the text. Separated from her family, she seeks refuge in the home of wealthy cousins, who try desperately to maintain their rigid traditions as warrign forces close in around Peking and the house is systematically looted. Mulberry escapes downriver in a boat carrying a strange assortiment of refugees. But her escape to Taiwan only brings new terrors: when her new husband is targeted by the police, Mulberry msut go into hiding with him in a tiny attic room. There her young daughterm who cannot remember life "outside", descends into a fantasy world of her own invention and unwittingly ensures her family's doom, Mulberry's journal entires alternate with a series of letters from Peach to "the man from the USA immigration service." Peach has embarked on a cross-country journey in flight from possible deportation. Pregnant and penniless, she lives by her wits while taunting her pursuers and ridiculing her alter ego Mulberry, whom she seeks, finally, to conquer. In Mulberry and Peach Hualing Nieh offers a rare perspective, through the eyes of a young refugee woman, of the upheavals of contemporary China (where the book was banned upon its first publication in 1976). Through her experimental, highly effective narrative, she also presents an unforgettable portrait of the pain of cultural dislocation and the anguish of psychological disintegration.Basti
By Intizar Husain, Asif Farrukhi, Frances W. Pritchett. 1979
An NYRB Classics OriginalBasti is a beautifully written reckoning with the tragic history of Pakistan. Basti means settlement, a common…
place, and Intizar Husain's extraordinary novel begins with a mythic, even mystic, vision of harmony between old and young, man and woman, Muslim and Hindu. Then Zakir, the hero, wakes to the modern world. Crowds gather. Slogans echo. Cities burn. Whether hunkered down with family or furtively meeting to exchange news with friends in cafés, Zakir is alone in a country lost to the politics of loneliness.history. The new country of Pakistan is born, separating him once and for all from the woman he loves, and in a jagged and jarring sequence of scenes we witness a nation and a psyche torn into existence only to be torn apart again and again by political, religious, economic, linguistic, personal, and sexual conflicts--in effect, a world of loneliness. Zakir, whose name means "remember," serves as the historian of this troubled place, while the ties he maintains across the years with old friends--friends who run into one another in cafés and on corners and the odd other places where history takes a time-out--suggest that the possibility of reconciliation is not simply a dream. The characters wait for a sign that minds and hearts may still meet. In the meantime, the dazzling artistry of Basti itself gives us reason to hope against hope.Through the Arc of the Rain Forest
By Karen Tei Yamashita. 1990
Through the Arc of the Rain Forest is a burlesque of comic-strip adventures and apocalyptic portents that stretches familiar truths…
to their logical extreme in a future world that is just recognizable enough to be frightening. In the Author's Note," Karen Tei Yamashita writes that her book is like a Brazilian soap opera called a novela: "the novela's story is completely changeable according to the whims of the public psyche and approval, although most likely, the unhappy find happiness; the bad are punished; true love reigns; a popular actor is saved from death ... an idyll striking innocence, boundless nostalgia and terrible ruthlessness." The stage is a vast, mysterious field of impenetrable plastic in the Brazilian rain forest set against a backdrop of rampant environmental destruction, commercialization, poverty, and religious rapture. Through the Arc of the Rainforest is narrated by a small satellite hovering permanently around the head of an innocent character named Kazumasa. Through no fault of his own, Kazumasa seems to draw strange and significant people into his orbit and to find himself at the center of cataclysmic events that involve carrier pigeons, religious pilgrims, industrial espionage, magic feathers, big money, miracles, epidemics, true love, and the virtual end of the world. This book is simultaneously entertaining and depressing, with all the rollicking pessimism you'd expect of a good soap opera or a good political satire."- Kirsten Backstrom, 500 Great Books by WomenVertigo
By Michael Hulse, W G Sebald. 2001
The beguiling first novel by W. G. Sebald, one of the most enormously acclaimed European writers of our time. Vertigo,…
W. G. Sebald's first novel, never before translated into English, is perhaps his most amazing and certainly his most alarming. Sebald--the acknowledged master of memory's uncanniness--takes the painful pleasures of unknowability to new intensities in Vertigo. Here in their first flowering are the signature elements of Sebald's hugely acclaimed novels The Emigrants and The Rings of Saturn. An unnamed narrator, beset by nervous ailments, is again our guide on a hair-raising journey through the past and across Europe, amid restless literary ghosts--Kafka, Stendhal, Casanova. In four dizzying sections, the narrator plunges the reader into vertigo, into that "swimming of the head," as Webster's defines it: in other words, into that state so unsettling, so fascinating, and so "stunning and strange," as The New York Times Book Review declared about The Emigrants, that it is "like a dream you want to last forever."A Matter of Time
By Ritu Menon, Shashi Deshpande. 1999
The New York Times Book Review called Shashi Deshpande's U.S. debut, "austere, philosophical, and rich; a work that . .…
. grows in moral force and pathos." Deshpande's critical acclaim in India--including three top literary prizes--prefigured the wide recognition abroad of this pivotal novel, now available in paperback.One morning, with no warning, Gopal, respected professor, devoted husband, and caring father, walks out on his family for reasons even he cannot articulate. His wife, Sumi, returns with their three daughters to the shelter of the Big House, where her parents live in oppressive silence: they have not spoken to each other in thirty-five years. As the mystery of this long silence is unraveled, a horrifying story of loss and pain is laid bare--a story that seems to be repeating itself in Sumi's life.Set in present-day Karnataka, A Matter of Time explores the intricate relationships within an extended family, encompassing three generations. Images from Hindu religion, myth, and local history intertwine delicately with images of contemporary India as the women face and accept the changes that have suddenly become part of their lives.As the women's secrets and strengths are revealed, so are the complications of family and culture, catching each in turn in the cycles of love, loss, and renewal that become essential to their identity. A Matter of Time reveals the hidden springs of character while painting a nuanced portrait of the difficulties and choices facing women--especially educated, independent women--in India today.Shashi Deshpande is the author of seven novels, including The Binding Vine, forthcoming from The Feminist Press and is one of India's most celebrated writers. Her work has been translated into many languages and broadly anthologized.Ritu Menon, a founder of Kali for Women, India's first feminist publisher, has co-edited three anthologies of writing by Indian women.Voy
By Gabi Mart nez. 2014
Literatura de viajes, nuevo periodismo, autoficción, parodia y metaliteratura en el nuevo libro de Gabi Martínez. «El convencimiento de estar…
donde debes y quieres es una de las grandes experiencias de la vida. Sentí que había llegado a un lugar que de alguna manera buscaba desde hacía mucho. Encontrar un lugar es bueno. Sí, es bueno.» Un joven periodista intenta localizar a Gabi Martínez, el escritor desaparecido en Nueva Zelanda cuando seguía la pista de un ave invisible tan real, o tan imaginaria, como las leyendas que la nombran. El reportero necesita entender qué motivos le llevaron a romper con su vida y desaparecer sin dejar rastro. Como hizo su propio padre, como ocurre con todos aquellos que no creen pertenecer a ningún lugar, los que se marchan mucho antes de emprender un viaje. Pero nunca existe una única versión de la historia. Por eso, la figura del viajero se va componiendo a medida que avanza la investigación, y las voces de su exmujer, alguno de sus amigos, varios guías de sus expediciones, compañeros de viaje o una de sus últimas amantes van perfilando al hombre en esencia, tan mezquino como espléndido, a medida que responden a las preguntas del periodista. No hay sólo una perspectiva, sino tantas como personas compartieron su vida. De la misma manera, Voy no es un único libro sino varios al tiempo. Es ficción, pero también literatura de viajes; es un relato de anhelos, pero también de desengaños; es comedia y a la vez drama. Una obra caleidoscópica que profundiza en el descubrimiento del yo a través de los otros, en la identidad como juego de espejos y en la utopía como final del viaje. Reseñas:«Desnudo literario integral que ve y sube la apuesta autoficcional de Coetzee en Verano.» Daniel Arjona, El Mundo «Un libro que se sale de lo común. Impecable e implacable. Un libro de búsquedas y sueños,de risas y quebrantos, de radical exploración personal a través del espejo que habitan los otros.» Tino Pertierra, La Nueva España «Deslumbrante (e impúdico) cruce entre el making of literario y la autobiografía. Imprescindible.» Jorge de Cominges, escritor «Gabi Martínez es un escritor de viajes introspectivo que encierra un pequeño Homero dentro mucho más revolucionario que en otros escritores. Ha sabido encontrar la manera de renovar la literatura viajera mediante enfoques inusuales, dejándose llevar por la misma osadía -y lucidez- que tuvo su precedente más claro y confeso: Bruce Chatwin, con quien comparte la capacidad de ruptura y de recreación. Literatura en vena.» Adolfo García Ortega, escritor, crítico y traductor, Club Cultura FNAC «Amplía el campo de acción del Verano de Coetzee (...) Me quito el sombrero: debe tenerse libertad y valentía para hacer un libro como éste. Da fuerza.» Mercè Ibarz, escritora «Martínez dista mucho de ser un escritor de viajes al uso y de manual (...). Podemos disfrutar de su originalidad, de un soberbio estilo de escritura y de muchas reflexiones sagaces de quien ha recorrido mundo y sabe de lo que habla. (...) Auténtico e intenso porque también en la vida, como demuestra Gabi en este libro, no debemos conformarnos con hacer turismo en los demás y en nosotros mismos.» Ángeles Prieto, La tormenta en un vaso «Una obra maestra.» La petita llibreriaTren fantasma a la Estrella de Oriente
By Paul Theroux. 2008
«Theroux es el canon por el que todo escritor de viajes debe juzgarse.»Observer Hace treinta años, Paul Theroux partió de…
Londres en un viaje de ida y vuelta por Asia en tren. Aquel relato -El gran bazar del ferrocarril- se convirtió en punto de referencia y su nombre en el más célebre de entre los autores de libros de viaje de su generación. Theroux vuelve ahora sobre sus pasos, a través del oeste de Europa, la India y Asia, para desvelar la ola de cambios que ha barrido los continentes. Un largo viaje que nos transporta del laberinto de Estambul a las ruinas de Merv o al superpoblado Delhi, de los ashrams de Bangalore a las barridas marginales de Singapur, de los templos de Angkor a la renacida Saigón, de la Ciudad Prohibida de Hue al Barrio Viejo de Hanói, de un inmenso sex shop en Tokio a un balneario en Wakkanai, del parque de los Ciervos en Nara al gulag de Perm... Reseña:«Un libro maravilloso insuflado de la agudeza de la madurez, que consigue aquello que un libro de viajes no puede obviar: logra que el lector desee ponerse en camino.»BooklistCuentos invisibles
By Pedro Sorela. 2002
Pedro Sorela emprende en estas páginas su viaje más largo: la distancia que separa un cuento de su historia. Estos…
cuentos son invisibles porque invisible es el lenguaje de la literatura, que no se puede filmar. También porque tratan de viajes, y el viaje es lo que se encuentra detrás de los ojos, no delante, y -al igual que la literatura- hace posible que de nuestra visión del mundo hagamos una creación. De una represa de aguas milenarias en la cima de los Andes a un motín de blancos en un río chino, de una persecución en Londres al renacimiento de un pobre tipo en Estambul, de una reunión de extravagantes en Helsinki a un Berlín improbable y sin embargo histórico, de un Madrid inédito a un Buenos Aires francés, los cuentos de Pedro Sorela ponen en evidencia el lado mentiroso de los pasaportes. Con humor y un idioma afilado, estos cuentos amplían el arco de una obra definida por la originalidad de la mirada y la sugerencia inherente a su doble condición de literatura y viaje. Reseñas:«Una experiencia humana intensa [...] un periplo abarcador de la existencia humana en el que entran componentes culturales, morales y hasta políticos, éstos no explícitos pero sí intencionados».Santos Sans Villaneva, El Cultural «Los relatos de Sorela prueban que ha viajado lo bastante para, como hubiera dicho Valle-Inclán, no ser arrogante cuando bien podría serlo».Víctor Andresco, El PaísCómo viajar sin ver
By Andrés Neuman. 1977
Un cruce entre la narrativa más actual y la crónica relámpago. Una visión literaria, al vuelo, de la geografía entera…
de la lengua. Reflexionando sobre el escaso tiempo previsto para recorrer cada país con el Premio Alfaguara, el autor se pregunta si hoy nuestros viajes consisten sobre todo en no ver. «¿Estaré por experimentar una hipérbole del turismo contemporáneo?», escribe. Pero el ritmo radical de su periplo está a punto de brindarle una oportunidad única: comparar todas las capitales latinoamericanas en una misma ráfaga. Andrés Neuman nos propone un recorrido vertiginoso por 19 países, interpretados por un ojo poético y político. Los presuntos no-lugares (aeropuertos, hoteles, taxis) quedan así convertidos en poderosos espacios de conflicto. Explorando con agudeza los dilemas de la identidad nacional y las contradicciones de la globalización, Cómo viajar sin ver es un diario innovador y divertido que experimentacon las formas de nuestro tiempo. Y que le toma el pulso a la vida cultural del continente, abordando no solamente a sus clásicos sino también a las nuevas generaciones de creadores. Un libro esencial para cualquier persona interesada en la historia, la actualidad y el futuro de Latinoamérica. Una manera distinta de pensar nuestra cultura cambiante y el sentido del viaje. Críticas:«A partir de ahora, todo viajero curioso que recorra Latinoamérica debería llevar consigo este libro portátil, apasionante y verdadero, de alguien que sabe oír y mirar sin prejuicios, con la lucidez que le proporciona su visión generosa.» Fernando Valls, Ínsula «Una obra estupenda. [...] Una América tan compleja, tan variada [...] que el lector piensa que no hay ficción capaz de competir con una realidad que parece albergarla.»José María Pozuelo Yvancos, ABC «En El viajero del siglo, por el que ha recibido el Premio de la Crítica, Neuman revisitaba la novela del siglo XIX, el viaje de ida; y del resultado de su gira ha nacido una narración del XXI: una antítesis, una cara B.»Ulises Fuentes, La Razón «Un libro de chispazos que no está edificado sobre la frivolidad o la brillantez visual, sino sobre la perspicacia de la mirada. Neuman tiene unas gafas que son sólo suyas, y a través de ellas miramos.»Luisgé Martín, Gente «Los fogonazos de Neuman iluminan Latinoamérica. El escritor radiografía la diversidad del continente.»Paula Corroto, Público «Su aguda percepción se renueva en cada aterrizaje. Aflora la magia viajera del autor, la calidad de un escritor como Andrés Neuman.»Gabriel Cetkovich, Clarín (Argentina) «Un conjunto de instantáneas divertidas, fugaces, conmovidas y conmovedoras, deslumbrantes destellos de una pluma privilegiada.»Guillermo Roz, Periodista Digital «Una virtuosa demostración de escritura al vuelo. Altamente observador, Neuman se concentra en cada instante y captura pequeños detalles que a otros escritores se les habrían escapado [...] Un vertiginoso retrato de Latinoamérica en todas sus miserias y glorias.»Kirkus Reviews (EE. UU.) «No se trata de una literatura de viajes convencional, y sin embargo el libro funciona. Eso es gracias al ojo de Neuman para el absurdo y la ironía. Más importante aún es su talento para lo sucinto. Lugares y personas quedan capturados en una sola, atinada frase [...]. Pese a los kilómetros que recorre, se regocija en la quietud, ya que su gran pasión es la lectura.»Oliver Balch, The Spectator (Reino Unido)Trás-os-montes
By Julio Llamazares. 1998
Literatura de viajes de Julio Llamazares, donde su talento narrativo y su profunda capacidad de observación del paisaje brillan con…
toda su fuerza. «-¿Habrá en el mundo una tierra más pobre que esta?- Sí. Tras-os-Montes, en Portugal.» «Es posible que esta vieja región histórica sea la más atrasada de la Europa civilizada, junto con las zonas más remotas e islas de Grecia y el interior de Cerdeña, Sicilia, Yugoslavia...»Extracto de una guía de viajes de Portugal Y, no obstante, el viajero que protagoniza este viaje portugués va creando, a su lento paso, una narración tan bella, tan hondamente humana, tan transida de comprensión (de los demás, de sí mismo, de la tierra) que el lector transita, en su lectura, por el paisaje más rico: es decir, el del hombre. Llamazares ha escrito un libro de enormes perspectivas, indiferente a los géneros y las clasificaciones. Es novela, si novela es espejo que se pasea al borde del camino. Es libro de viajes, porque las comarcas pasan por sus páginas. Es relato iniciático, porque el viajero va transformándose con su viaje. Y es, sobre todo, gran literatura. Reseñas:«Lo mejor del libro es ese personaje sorprendido por lo que va viendo: ese viajero y su contar calmo y sobrio en el que no es posible medir el tiempo.»El País «El ritmo de su escritura en prosa es deudor de esa ambición de asociar las palabras (y la memoria, que es su fuente) con el ritmo; la música es consustancial con su narrativa, y eso le viene de la poesía.»Juan Cruz, El País «Julio Llamazares es, sin duda, uno de esos escritores que nos reconcilian con el ejercicio de la literatura.»Aurelio Loureiro, Leer «Julio Llamazares sigue siendo un escritor especial, alguien capaz de mirar el mundo de otra manera.»El Correo Gallego «Un escritor de su categoría podría redactar los anuncios por palabras de un periódico y seguiría siendo interesante.»Qué Leer «Llamazares siempre escribe igual cuando viaja, habría que añadir también que siempre escribe bien, sin arrogancia, desprejuiciadamente, con sentido del humor y con cariñosa indulgencia cuando retrata.»Andrés Barba, El CulturalSet in post-World War II Shanghai, The Song of Everlasting Sorrow follows the adventures of Wang Qiyao, a girl born…
of the longtong, the crowded, labyrinthine alleys of Shanghai's working-class neighborhoods. Infatuated with the glitz and glamour of 1940s Hollywood, Wang Qiyao seeks fame in the Miss Shanghai beauty pageant, and this fleeting moment of stardom becomes the pinnacle of her life. During the next four decades, Wang Qiyao indulges in the decadent pleasures of pre-liberation Shanghai, secretly playing mahjong during the antirightist Movement and exchanging lovers on the eve of the Cultural Revolution. Surviving the vicissitudes of modern Chinese history, Wang Qiyao emerges in the 1980s as a purveyor of "old Shanghai"—a living incarnation of a new, commodified nostalgia that prizes splendor and sophistication—only to become embroiled in a tragedy that echoes the pulpy Hollywood noirs of her youth. From the violent persecution of communism to the liberalism and openness of the age of reform, this sorrowful tale of old China versus new, of perseverance in the face of adversity, is a timeless rendering of our never-ending quest for transformation and beauty.Who Ate Up All the Shinga?: An Autobiographical Novel (Weatherhead Books on Asia)
By Wan-Suh Park. 2009
Park Wan-suh is a best-selling and award-winning writer whose work has been widely translated and published throughout the world. Who…
Ate Up All the Shinga? is an extraordinary account of her experiences growing up during the Japanese occupation of Korea and the Korean War, a time of great oppression, deprivation, and social and political instability.Park Wan-suh was born in 1931 in a small village near Kaesong, a protected hamlet of no more than twenty families. Park was raised believing that "no matter how many hills and brooks you crossed, the whole world was Korea and everyone in it was Korean." But then the tendrils of the Japanese occupation, which had already worked their way through much of Korean society before her birth, began to encroach on Park's idyll, complicating her day-to-day life. With acerbic wit and brilliant insight, Park describes the characters and events that came to shape her young life, portraying the pervasive ways in which collaboration, assimilation, and resistance intertwined within the Korean social fabric before the outbreak of war. Most absorbing is Park's portrait of her mother, a sharp and resourceful widow who both resisted and conformed to stricture, becoming an enigmatic role model for her struggling daughter. Balancing period detail with universal themes, Park weaves a captivating tale that charms, moves, and wholly engrosses.The Tales of the Heike (Translations from the Asian Classics)
By Burton Watson, Haruo Shirane. 2006
The Tales of the Heike is one of the most influential works in Japanese literature and culture, remaining even today…
a crucial source for fiction, drama, and popular media. Originally written in the mid-thirteenth century, it features a cast of vivid characters and chronicles the epic Genpei war, a civil conflict that marked the end of the power of the Heike and changed the course of Japanese history. The Tales of the Heike focuses on the lives of both the samurai warriors who fought for two powerful twelfth-century Japanese clans-the Heike (Taira) and the Genji (Minamoto)-and the women with whom they were intimately connected.The Tales of the Heike provides a dramatic window onto the emerging world of the medieval samurai and recounts in absorbing detail the chaos of the battlefield, the intrigue of the imperial court, and the gradual loss of a courtly tradition. The book is also highly religious and Buddhist in its orientation, taking up such issues as impermanence, karmic retribution, attachment, and renunciation, which dominated the Japanese imagination in the medieval period.In this new, abridged translation, Burton Watson offers a gripping rendering of the work's most memorable episodes. Particular to this translation are the introduction by Haruo Shirane, the woodblock illustrations, a glossary of characters, and an extended bibliography.