Picking Bones from Ash: A Novel

Picking Bones from Ash: A Novel

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3.76 of 5 stars 3.76  ·  rating details  ·  152 ratings  ·  50 reviews
Ghosts lurk in the bamboo forest outside the tiny northern Japanese town where Satomi lives with her elusive mother, Atsuko. A preternaturally gifted pianist, Satomi wrestles with inner demons. Her fall from grace is echoed in the life of her daughter, Rumi, who unleashes a ghost she must chase from foggy San Francisco to a Buddhist temple atop Japan’s icy Mount Doom. In s...more
Paperback, 320 pages
Published February 1st 2011 by Graywolf Press (first published September 29th 2009)
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Susan
I'm amazed that more people have not heard of this or read it. I thought it was wonderful. The plot begins with Satomi, a young girl in Japan whose single mother makes sure she nurtures her artistic talent. Eventually, the mother marries, and Satomi feels pushed aside in her mother's affection by her step-sisters. We follow many twists and turns as Satomi tries to find her way as a young adult.

The story then jumps in space and time, and we discover Rumi, Satomi's daughter, being raised in Califo...more
Roxanne
Picking Bones from Ash, by Marie Mutsuki Mockett, is a beautiful and almost-haunting novel that explores the struggles mothers and daughters face when trying to understand each other across cultures and generations. I was instantly moved by Mockett's choice of words. Each one feels like it was hand-picked for the novel after careful consideration. There is a lightness and a beauty to the descriptive prose in this novel that consumed me. I felt my own emotions being altered based on what was happ...more
switterbug (Betsey)
The theme of mother-daughter bonds and the search for identity is explored in this novel. In the mountains of rural Japan, in 1954, Satomi lives with her mother, Akiko, who runs a pub, or *izakaya.* Satomi has sufficient talent to enter piano competitions and subsequently goes to college on a music scholarship; however, she struggles in her search for an authentic life. Her independence is nearly thwarted at various times by her cruel stepsisters and her penury. Additionally, a man she started a...more
Lisa Eggers
Hmmm... Something kept me reading this book, but it wasn't because it was good. I guess it was my infactuation with Japan. This book was just all over the place. It was so disjointed. It started out like an Amy Tan novel, but not quite as interesting, telling the story of a young girl growing up in Japan with her single and unusual mother who ran a small bar. This part wasn't bad and lasted for about a third of the book. So you basically spend 100 pages getting yourself invested in these charact...more
Johanna
First of all, this book should have been longer to unpack all the things and events that Mockett just rushes through. The first thing they teach you in creative writing is "show, don't tell". Apparently Mockett has never heard this, which makes me wonder what business she has writing a first novel at all. She telegraphs almost all the important events in the book for the reader, without letting the audience figure it out for themselves. It's like the story serves only the purpose of a few well-t...more
Michelle
Picking Bones from Ash is one of those subtle stories that has more depth than a reader initially realizes. Not just a ghost story, this is ultimately a story about family - what brings one together and what tears one apart. For those unfamiliar with Japan and their culture, Ms. Mockett introduces the reader to the intricacies of Japanese families, the beauty of its geography, and the grandeur of its religious sites while bridging the gap between East and West with a story that resonates no matt...more
Susan
I read an advanced copy from amazon
Satomi is a female character that is difficult to like. Self absorbed and stubborn she suffered her mother's demands with grace. Things in the story are not what they seem to be. Are the antiques real or fake? Are they legal or stolen? The tale is like the masks that the Japanese people wear, some wear real and freightening masks for festivals and some just facial expressions that hide thoughts and emotions. Satomi and Rumi each put forth great effort to please...more
Melissa
Satomi is a young girl living with her single mother in Japan during the 1950's. She is a gifted pianist and success for both of them depends upon developing this talent. Satomi, headstrong, becomes restless with her life in Japan. Her relationship with her mother becomes strained. She eventually leaves Japan to attend school in the United States where she realizes that music is perhaps not something that she loves or wants to continue persuing. She begins collecting and selling Japanese antique...more
Emily
A lovely debut novel that doesn't 'talk down' to its readers with unnecessary exposition or unrealistically redeemed characters.

There are a few places where the pacing gets a bit jerky and moments where the book indulges in the exotification that it so often critques.

Overall, though, it is beautifully written and offers some interesting thoughts on how people tend to endow objects with whatever emotionally properties they lack in the own lives. This ranges from the desire to possess those clos...more
Tonya Plank
I LOVED this book -- stayed up all night reading it! It takes place from the 1950s through early 1990s, between Japan, Paris and San Francisco, but mostly Japan, and tells the interlocking stories of two women, Satomi and Rumi.

Satomi, growing up in a small Japanese town in the 50s, is pushed hard to become a concert pianist by her single mother, who believes (correctly, it turns out -- at least in mid-20th Century Japan, and America) that "there is only one way a woman can be truly safe in this...more
Diane
Picking Bones From Ash is a stunning debut novel, about three generations of women living in Japan and the United States from just after WWII through the present day. Satomi, is a young girl growing up in the 1950's in a small Japanese village with her beautiful," single mother who owns a local pub. No one seems to know who the little girl's father is. The other women of the village are jealous of the mother's beauty and cruel to both mother and daughter, banning the two from the public bath.


Sa...more
Kasa Cotugno
How much information should be passed from mother to daughter? What is the purpose of withholding key information? Does the bond between mothers and daughters get strengthened or weakened when one or both are blessed with astounding talents? By setting this beautiful story in Japan and, briefly, in San Francisco, Marie Mutsuki Mockett ponders the cultural differences in answering these questions she raises. However, it is the Japanese settings that prove most fascinating to the western reader.

E...more
Ron
Just as you're getting into the story of Satomi, a young woman growing up in the 1950s whose mother encourages her classical music training in order to help her escape the poverty of her upbringing outside the major cities of Japan, Marie's novel fast forwards twenty years into the future, as Rumi, Satomi's daughter, starts prodding at everything she's been told about her mother's death. (And how, you'll be asking yourself, did Satomi end up with THIS man instead of THAT one?)

Marie brings these...more
Cassandra
The first thing that I noticed as I read was the striking similarity in tone between this novel and the work of Amy Tan. It is a great compliment to the writer that Tan’s approval of the story appears on the book’s cover. It is deserving of such praise- “A book of intelligence and heart.” It is a book of great promise, and it delivers on so many levels. There are a few areas, however, where the story strays a bit too far from where it seems to be going.

The dual narratives of Satomi and her daugh...more
Sarah
I really enjoyed the reflections and immersion in Japanese culture alongside the examination of the sometimes challenging relationship between mother and daughter. I was so involved with Satomi as be slightly angry when the story shifted to pick up the thread of her daughter Rumi, but the author wove the stories together so well that I eventually welcomed the second perspective. The characters felt very realistic - they are who they are, and there's no expectation that they will somehow work eve...more
Amy
This is not a book that will stay with me very long, yet I am still glad I read it. For a first novel, it is very intriguing. Switching voices between mother and daughter, this novel involves relationships, Japanese tradition, art dealing, and ghosts! Mockett delves into the difficult relationships between mothers and daughters and what it feels like to grow up without a history. Prepare yourself to not always like the characters, but still feel emotionally involved in their lives. You desperate...more
Brooke
Really enjoyedit. Loved the main character most as a child. I had to finish the book as she got older but it was kind of a chore. I loved learning about the Japanese culture. I thought i wouldnt like The magic realism but I interpreted it as a visual explanation of intuition. It gave intuition a more credible standingto me. Intuition is given about the same status as magic it seems. I didn't understand the main character grown up. She seemed to have lost her depth. The ending was a place to end...more
Martha Davis
This is one of those rare books for me that I really liked even though I didn’t particularly care for any of the characters. While I could understand some of the motivation behind Atsuko, Satomi’s mother, she’s a rather cold mother and some of the choice she makes really bothered me. She marries in order to provide Satomi with the schooling she needs to be a concert pianist and then proceeds to push Satomi away from her. Satomi is young girl just trying to please her mother and to get her mother...more
Clif Hostetler
This novel uses a story about three generations of women to explore Japanese culture and its differences from Western culture. Using the three perspectives of the grandmother (born and lived in Japan), the mother (born in Japan but exposed to Western culture), and the daughter (born and raised in the USA) the book explores the differences in culture viewed from the inside looking out and from the outside looking in. The story is filled with unanswered questions--the mother never learns who her f...more
Sonja
Won from Firstreads. I was really looking forward to reading this book. While reading it I kept wavering between whether it should get 2 stars or 3. At times it flowed well, and I felt like I was really getting to know the characters. At other times, I found myself re-reading sections because there was a jump in time or a change in voice. Changing between Satomi and Rumi telling the story worked in some ways because we got each character's voice, but the transitions seemed abrupt and jarring. In...more
Jessica
Although the book is mainly about the three generations of women (Akoki, Satomi, and Rumi) and how they affect each other, the story is also about family in general. The story shows how women are affected by their mothers and their mother's decisions and also how the rest of our family has an influence on women.

The book is divided into five sections which alternate between different points in time for the characters of Satomi and Rumi.

The characters in this story are quite realistic, well writt...more
Tena
This was a fun read. Well written, very beautifully done. The story centers on Satomi and her daughter Rumi, but not until the end are they together. I haven't read much Japanese themed literature, but I found this very enjoyable. I loved the way that the author weaves Buddhism with everyday life and family traditions, and the way she makes the reader understand that nobody is perfect, regardless of outside appearances. Mockett does a wonderful job of bringing these characters to life.
Kim
This is the story of one womans' journey to find out who she is, and in doing so, finds out not only who she is, but who her mother is. Sound confusing? It isn't when you read this book. Starting in the 1950's Japan, Satomi always wanted to know about her father whom she never knew. Rumi, Satomi's daughter, is raised in the states and told her mother is dead. Rumi's journey becomes Satomi's. It was a good book, just not something that spoke to me personaly.
Lin Toms
This was my dollar store $1 book. Best book I've read in a long time so felt like I got a real steal. This was the author's first novel and was magnificent. A mix of Japanese and American heritage but more Japanese. The author developed the characters in a clear minded way while at the same time weaving them into a complex life story mixed in with some of the ghosts of Japan. Lovely book.
Jim
Marie Mutsuki Mockett’s debut is an arresting story of three generations of Japanese women trying to come to terms with who they are. Now that’s a sentence that can be used to describe a boatload of books and doesn’t do this one justice. Mockett has a remarkable ability to infuse her story with subtle nuances so that a piano recital is infused with desperate tension, the discovery of a hidden artifact is limned with the supernatural, and a journey into the north of the Japan takes on the qualiti...more
Meda
Great time range. The first section seems as though it may explore fairly "modern" issues, but I was pleased and surprised at the contemporary aspects of the novel. I was impressed by the author's confident and worldly voice. I have an admittedly biased curiosity about Asian-American writing, and I found this work both personal and universal.
Jennifer
An intriguing debut about mother daughter relations, cultural differences, as well as generational differences. My full review may be read on my book review blog Rundpinne.
Natalie
Satomi is one of the better fictional characters that I have read in a long while. She is hell bent on carving out a space for herself in this world. Mockett spins a tale that is both magical and complex and definitely holds the readers attention. This book is marketed as a 'mother-daughter' novel, it is SO much more than that!
Susan
Interesting storyline, but it took quite some time to take shape fully; lots learned about the culture of Japan (from both an insider's and outsider's perspective). Good stuff about music (piano) and art and religion. I'd have given it 4 stars but for the fact that in the end most all of the characters were unlikeable human beings.
Mark
This is one of the best books I've read in quite a while. Words flow like listening to Faye Wong's beautiful heavenly voice, the story unfolded seemingly effortlessly. One of those books you look forward to reading and hate to see end. Now I only hope the author writes more.
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MARIE MUTSUKI MOCKETT was born in California to a Japanese mother and an American father. A graduate of Columbia University, she lives in New York City with her husband. Picking Bones from Ash is her first novel."

Marie Mutsuki Mockett's debut novel, Picking Bones from Ash, was published by Graywolf Press on October 1st, 2009. Already the book has garnered acclaim: Amy Tan has praised the novel as...more
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“My mother always told me that there is only one way a woman can be truly safe in this world. And that is to be fiercely, inarguably, and masterfully talented. This is different than being intelligent or even educated. (Satomi from Picking Bones From Ash) 9 people liked it
“…you look like a loved person. It always shows on people’s faces. The ones who discover love when they are much older always look startled. The loved ones expect it from other people.” 5 people liked it
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