Out

by Natsuo Kirino
Out  
published September 2nd 2004 by Vintage
first published 1997
binding Paperback
isbn 0099472287   (isbn13: 9780099472285)
pages 388
literary awards Edgar Award Finalist
description OUT was awarded the Grand Prix of the Mystery Writers of Japan in 1997-the Asian equivalent of an Edgar.
It is a dynamic example of the work of ...more
date added
05-12-07



Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of Out.







discuss this book

topics replies views last activity
Sell / Swap? 1 9 06/27/2008 06:10AM
Out by Natsuo Kirino 2 13 05/05/2007 05:25PM

groups with this book

Japanese Literature
Friends That Read
Perceptive Quality Time Queens




friend reviews (0)

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.



lists with this book




other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1398)



Shannon
bookshelves: 2008, contemporary-fiction, crime, favourite
Read in May, 2008
There's just something about Japan that produces the grittiest, darkest, scariest, most realistic horror, psychological thriller, and suspense. The seedy underbelly of Japanese society is perhaps so successfully portrayed because so little has been embellished. And with the dark, empty surburban streets, so much is possible, so much can go unnoticed. In Natsuo Kirino's wonderful crime novel, Out, a sharp social commentary on Japan's patriarchal society and the situation for women and fore...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  add a comment

Mike Philbin
02/24/08

Masako Katori; Kuniko Jonouchi; Yoshie Azuma; Yayoi Yamamoto; who are these normal people? Well, they all work the night shift at the local boxed-lunch factory. From midnight until 6 a.m. every 'day' they prepare these meals for the office workers and commuters of downtown Tokyo. It's not much of a life but they work well as a team and they always snatch the best part of the conveyor belt; the easiest jobs, if you will.

These four unassuming women are the heroines of Natsuo Kirino's novel OUT...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Valerie
bookshelves: 2006-2008-singapore, contemporary-lit
Read in June, 2008
recommended to Valerie by: Kat, PrimeTime
recommends it for: cast-iron stomachs
Out contains some truly gruesome passages, and having finished it quickly, I was trying to decide whether I was more affected by the bloody bits or by the banal--but nevertheless gruesome--bits regarding everyday life in Japan. But as the days go by, I find my memory of the gruesome passages has faded almost entirely and I'm left with feeling depressed by the despairing conditions she depicts of everyday life under capitalism.

That's right--everyone else will talk about the gender relations...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  add a comment

Stephanie A.
bookshelves: japan
Read in August, 2008
Still trying to sort out my thoughts about this book, but basically, Masako is awesome. It's been a while since I've really fallen for a character. The rest of the cast isn't so stellar-- Yoshie, Yayoi, and especially Kuniko seem to be exemplifying certain types of women, and it's obvious what the writer thinks of each. Kuniko doesn't have a single saving grace as a human being...or as a character, unless you count the fact that she's so utterly lame and selfish and useless that she makes Masako...more
Like this review?   yes  
  2 comments

Ferina
07/12/07

bookshelves: movie-tie-in, mystery-thriller
Read in May, 2007
Empat orang perempuan bekerja pada shift malam di sebuah pabrik makanan kotakan. Mereka cukup dekat, meskipun tidak bisa dikatakan bersahabat. Mereka berempat biasa bekerja dalam satu baris atau satu kelompok dan saling mem-back up satu sama lain. Keempat wanita itu adalah Yayoi, Masako, Yoshie, dan Kuniko.

Mereka semua punya masalah tersendiri dengan rumah tangga mereka yang bisa dibilang tidak bahagia.

Tidak ada yang menduga apa yang dilakukan oleh Yayoi dan teman-temannya – para ibu ...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Nancyc
06/09/08

bookshelves: literary-fiction
Natsuo Kirino has a new book coming out in July, Real World. I added her to my list after reading Out last fall. I know. The title, Out, sounds like a political thriller about a gay hazing. After reading the book, I never figured out what the title, Out, meant in relation to the book. Must be one of those times when east doesn’t quite translate into west. But the book was fascinating.

I’m struggling to figure out how to describe it. Out is a complex, feminist thriller in the Conrad...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Angerball
Angerball rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
01/21/08

bookshelves: 2008
Read in January, 2008
Out is a gritty thriller, set in modern-time Japan; it follows the lives of four dissatisfied (for various reasons) women working the late shift at a boxed lunch factory. When one of the women murders her husband in a fit of rage, and recruits her fellow workers to dismember and dispose of the body, she sets into motion a chain of events that will leave each of them altered forever.

This is the second time I’ve read this book, and I have to admit that it did not grab me as much as the firs...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Frank
08/03/08

Read in July, 2008
recommended to Frank by: NYT
recommends it for: adults
Someone compared this novel to Dostoevsky's "Crime and Punishment". They have in common the theme of guilt as well as the unpredictable consequences of planned and spontaneous criminal acts.
But "Crime and Punishment", as I remember it, takes us inside one mind - Raskolnikov's - while this one takes us inside the minds of several people who have committed crimes that haunt them. Their interaction drives the plot but their indvidual characters are so fascinating and their m...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Bernie
05/28/07

bookshelves: mysterypsychologicalsuspense
Read in July, 2006
recommends it for: people who adore Patricia Highsmith ("Ripley" series)
Here is a gritty, compelling book about a Japanese woman who strangles her philandering husband, then recruits her co-workers at a factory to help her dispose of the body, and gets mired in a sea of lies upon lies. It reminded me of "Shallow Grave" in its darkness, and was a bit rough in the gruesome details - but utterly compelling.

Kirino is a much-heralded author in Japan, where they are fascinated by the dark side of life, and this novel won her the Grand Prix prize (Japan's to...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  add a comment

Yulia
05/09/08

bookshelves: by-and-of-japan, criminal-intent, read-to-me-by-frank
Read in January, 2006
A modern masterpiece which even my father acknowledged had a Dostoevskian scope and social conscience. Kirino's biting critique of Japan's social and economic underclass is as much a thriller as it is an empowering exposé on those whose stories are never told: the unseen night-shift factory workers who make Japan's endless supply of box lunches, the alienated Brazilian immigrants who never attain status as citizens, and the young women who are neither cute nor wealthy and can't live off their ...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  add a comment

Keith
01/27/08

Read in January, 2008
Definitely a page-turner, Out is a realistic (or pretty much realistic) account of murder and cover-up set in the impoverished underbelly of Japan. Its desperate central characters are four women looking for some way to escape their bleak domestic and professional prisons. Murder, and the resulting windfalls that accompany it, provides the "out," but of course the escape is complicated both by its practical and moral dimensions. I thought it was a very compelling read and - as some of ...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Kell
01/20/08

bookshelves: read-2008
Read in January, 2008
recommended to Kell by: Book Club Forum reading circle choice for January 2008
recommends it for: Fans of crime fiction and Japanese authors
I was expecting Out to be far more graphic and violent than I found it to be, but that's not to say I was disappointed. There's excitement of a sort, set against the mundane lives of four factory workers. The sharp contrast between the boredom of the factory and the harsh realities of dealing with a dead body make this quite a dark piece, especially when you realise that for some, there is very little difference in what they are doing.

There are some moments that are almost humorous (albeit o...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

rinabeana
bookshelves: book-club
Read in April, 2005
I admit up front that I know very little about Japanese culture and I've not read many writings by Japanese authors. For about the first third of this book I was just horribly depressed because all the characters were utterly miserable, especially the women. The plight of Japanese women was quite sad. They seemed like good women who deserved a bit of happiness out of life, but the really sad part was that they had pretty much resigned themselves to their lot in life, though they weren't quite su...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Jessica
Read in April, 2008
Japanese novelists, known for mastering the art of human suffering with razor sharp subtlety (think Mishima's "Temple of the Golden Pavilion"), share the literary blade with writers who have modernized this "quiet brutality" which is so omnipresent in Japanese literature. Kirino's crime fiction novel "Out" entices with unsentimental murder and dismemberment (hey, if that's your thing), female backlash grounded in the fertile soil of Man's vices and the snare of clas...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  1 comments

Katie
11/11/07

Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: No One
Although this book is the same genre as many books I've enjoyed, I found it to be terribly boring. Since it was an award-winner in Japan, I'm betting the laborous writing style was more a product of the translation than the writing itself. In other words, the writing in the original Japanese was probably very well done, and the translator did his job of putting it into readable English, but it didn't flow as well as novels written in English. The words may have been a correct translation, but...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  1 comments

Meems
05/15/08

bookshelves: asian, fiction
Read in May, 2008
recommended to Meems by: Adam
Perhaps it's the spring-time air and the blooming trees that makes me want to avoid books like this. While I'm all about the dark side of things this was a bit too desperate for me. These women are struggling enough that slicing up bodies is a way to improve their lives. I felt for them. I understood their desperation. But their was no relief from their symptoms of life. Unless you count the horrendous ending... I won't spoil it but not only did it make my stomach turn and my mind twist into a p...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Laura
02/11/08

bookshelves: advisory, over-400-pages
Read in September, 2007
recommended to Laura by: friend
recommends it for: murder mystery lovers
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Novita
03/04/08

Read in January, 2007
recommends it for: book-lovers who loves thrillers
life can be change so drastically. It depends how you manage and choose your own life, being bad or good ;)

Pernah membaca novel sampe merinding? Mual? Jijik?
Mungkin gak banyak novel yang membuat gw merinding sekaligus mual, tapi yang pasti saat membaca novel ini, baru pada 1/3 bagian novel-gw langsung benar-benar merasa sensasi mual, merinding , ngeri nyampur menjadi satu. Penggambaran kejadiannya begitu hebat sehingga gw seperti "menonton adegan" suram dan kelam yang digambarkan...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Eve
08/28/08

Four women, each with troubles of her own, work on a night shift in a lunchbox factory. When one of them murders her abusive, gambling husband, her friends assist her in disposing of the body, without foreseeing the dangerous consequences that the act will bring.

Overall, there aren't that many galvanizing moments in the story - in compensation, the main characters and their surroundings are profusely detailed. The horror of the the women's situation is conveyed in an almost leisurely manner, a...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Preeta
02/05/08

Read in February, 2008