A slim volume with four stories, each one featuring a Japanese woman viewed from within her role in the family or in a spousal relationship. Three of the stories also involve the female protagonist as Japanese emigrants, transplants trying to adapt to the alien environment and the Anglo society of Australia.
I appreciated the way in which the Japanese women's response to the idiosyncracies of the Australian landscape and its characteristic weather (wet & dry seasons instead of the usual four).
The quiet and yet meticulous attention to detail, as the women chafe at their social constraints, reminds me somewhat of the contemporary stories by Rebecca Miller, although Yamamoto's tone is far from the bleakness of Miller's.
(In the last story, there's a reference to the work of Saki, but I am afraid to say I no longer recall his stories that I read at university, so as to make any possible connection with Yamamoto's style.)
- Betty-san
Almost cinematic portrayal of Yuko/Betty, I could 'see' her so vividly.
- Father Goose
Simple, almost like a traditional tale. I liked this one a lot.
- Powers
Interesting story about suburbian angst.
- Chair in the Rain
The most complex of the stories, rich in emotion and symbolism.