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I'm having a little challenge getting into TZM, but no doubt that's more about what's going on my household at the moment than any fault of Shimada's. I do think it's odd given his genre and volume of work that only one novel was translated.

Ok. Thanks Bill! I liked other Mishima novels but I don't think I would like Forbidden Colors. I don..."
yes, Joanne, join me in my challenge of reading the first 3 in time to read the 4th in June !!! I am reading Spring snow now.





I saw the Imamura Shouhei movie The Eel in the late 90s when it got a limited US release, because it was an Imamura movie and they are often disturbing but rarely disappointing. It was more feel-good than a lot of his earlier movies, and had much smoother cinematography. After seeing it was loosely based on On Parole, I figured I'd give the original a try.
On Parole has a lot to say about the Japanese penal system, especially in the first half. It doesn't tell us until halfway through what our parolee's crime was, and only then because it starts impinging again on his consciousness. Overall, the novel has a very solitary, introspective feel to it. Sure, there are other characters, but so much of it goes on within our parolee's head. It's hard to say more without spoiling, so I'll stop here.
I shouldn't be typing this much right after shoulder surgery, anyway.



I have not read it but I do have a copy. It's been on my to read list for some time... enjoyable?

It is difficult to know what hit you with that one.
I loved it but discussing it is just...
like trying to discuss a dream in the morning, it will never make sense to the other person and after few minutes not even to yourself.
I am happy I read it though. An authentic experience, no doubt. I really loved it and I also understand why many people think it rubbish.
i guess that did not help :D

It's by Kawakami Hiromi, whose Nakano Thrift Shop we recently read. I'm liking The Briefcase better than Nakano Thrift Shop. It has the same light, slice-of-life feel to it, and the dialog is easier to follow than in Nakano Thrift Shop. The cover calls it a romance, but a third of the way in, it's still just a friendship between a 30s woman and one of her old high school teachers. If you liked Nakano, give this one a try, in the English language of your choice :)

I liked this one too. His other one, Malice, was also very good.
If you haven't read, I definitely recommend Higashino's Journey Under the Midnight Sun. It's a little on the heavy side (over 500 pages), but the structure, plot, narrative perspectives etc are expertly weaved, and the amount of detail he goes into is impressive. I really enjoyed it.

I'm so glad you explained the publishing pathway on this one. I bought the ebook of Strange Weather and didn't realize that the Briefcase existed - let alone that it's Americanized.


The title story is about a near-pedophile: she buys clothes for little boys just so she can get them to undress and dress again.
Most of the stories in this volume have no actual ending. Take the story about the woman who is told (by someone unidentified) that he will kill her in 26 hours. The story only contains the first 8 of those 26 hours, and we never find out who the killer is.
As the top review on GR states, most of the women in this book are hardcore masochists. Sure, the author wants to be deviant and risque. But couldn't she think of any other fetishes?
Not recommended.
I have to give kudos to the translator and publisher, though, for not flopping the names. It's exceedingly rare to find publishers with the guts to leave names intact.

I am sure I would be enjoying it more if I could really take the time for it, no pressure, during a vacation. But now I have little time and a big pile of bought books looking at me, generating a feeling that I have to keep moving, since I have just been buying way to many volumes and if I do not read them quickly I can not allow myself to buy more books. Which is a horrible sensation.

" 2 pages after that the action was beginning , so I'll take that back, and now I am really enjoying it :). page 312 of 421!

I found Runaway Horses really fun when you think of Mishima's life personally.
I mean, as a comparison (I don't think this is really spoilers, but tagging it)
(view spoiler) Though I will confess I did skim some parts of Runaway Horses that I felt positively dragged
Personally of the 4, my favorite is the next book because it's so weird that it's kinda hilarious.

Yeah That could have been like a 4th of the length and you would have gotten the point easily. I skimmed it.
Do you read in tandem with other books? You may want to take a break from it. Runaway horses was easily the worst book in the sense of it being the most boring.

I am still aiming for finishing the tetralogy in June.
Worst part is over though, now we are finally in full swing !
I can't skim, unfortunately. Skimming stresses me. I am always afraid of missing something vital, so even if i lose attention for 5 lines in a book I just need to go back and reread until I am confident I got every detail.... must be some psychological affection...


No way, you liked book 3 the most? That's easily my least favourite. I don't even remember much about it. I quite liked Runaway Horses, probably on the same level as Spring Snow.
I'm 100 pages in of book 4 The Decay of the Angel. Found it a bit boring to be honest. Just hoping there's a whole point to this at the end xD

Book 1- Ugh This guy is a dick. Why does the story have to be about him????? *totally missing the point*
Book 2- This is boring why do I have to read a screed inside the book?
Book 3- This is the crudest distillation of what I deem the funniest moment: (view spoiler)
Then some other stuff happens, but that was about the closest I came to cracking up. It seemed so ridiculous!
I mean, if you took that out, Spring Snow would be my favorite, now that I get the point.
And book 4 I just found depressing.

If you haven't read, I definitely recommend Higashino's Journey Under the Midnight Sun. It's a little on the heavy side (over 500 pages), but the structure, plot, narrative perspectives etc are expertly weaved, and the amount of detail he goes into is impressive. I really enjoyed it."
Thanks! I’ll certainly give both of those a shot. So far I’ve really enjoyed his works.
Currently reading Treasure Island... not Japanese I know, but I’m trying to go through some of the classics I was never assigned in school that I feel I missed out on.

If you haven't read, I definitely recommend Higashino's Journey Under the Midnight Sun. It's a little on the heavy side (..."
What’s your preliminary call on TI? I’ve not read a word of it but am open to it if it’s worthwhile. I sometimes struggle with 1800s traditional (white male, Western) classics but the ones I’ve loved I love a lot.


Ahah, I just read Treasure Island last year :)

Mishima is strange.
Of course he plunged a knife into his stomach, so alienation was to be expected.

I thought that one was pretty fun. Agatha Christie rather hated the Poirot character, and I think this is the first book in the series where it really shows. His arrogance in this one seems amped up quite a bit to an almost comical degree ("My name is Hercule Poirot, and I am probably the greatest detective in the world"). The plot isn't one of her best, but the characters are all pretty good.



Bienvenue :) I haven't read this one from Murakami yet, how was it? I wonder what is meant with "... and the Japanese Psyche"?


I’ve been wanting to read Underground, too. I need to move it up my TBR.




I don’t know, Josh.

This time I read Snakes and Earrings, because I hadn't read it before. If I had to pick one or the other, I'd pick Autofiction, because I feel it's a bit better a book, and probably less dissatisfying to the reader (I think the dissatisfaction in Snakes and Earrings is the point, but that doesn't mean it makes a pleasant read. )
I really need to change up what I've been reading, I calculated, and YA made up the majority of my reading. I believe reading something different will really help me.

I am one reader who was mostly let down by Snakes and Earrings. Maybe I'll check out Autofiction.
Books mentioned in this topic
Nan-Core (other topics)Chieko, and Other Poems of Takamura Kotaro (other topics)
Chieko's Sky (other topics)
Tale of the Princess Kaguya Picture Book (other topics)
The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Kotaro Takamura (other topics)Iori Kusano (other topics)
Fehu Kazuno (other topics)
David Guterson (other topics)
Donald Keene (other topics)
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Hi Carol,
Sorry for the late reply, I only just saw your question! Yes, I finished Quicksand, and it was like reading about a torrid (or perhaps I should say sordid?) love affair that degenerated rather quickly. None of the characters were likeable, and I thought the ending was rather weird and a bit overblown.
Josh mentioned The Tokyo Zodiac Murders. I enjoyed that one and it was quite intriguing. I had fun figuring out how things worked. I admit I was probably a bit more partial because I'd watched a short drama special on the lead detective character Mitarai Kiyoshi, which then led me to hunt for the author (Shimada) and his works. It's a pity other Shimada works haven't been translated into English.