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Odoriba Kingyo The Goldfish at the landing |
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Shueisha (2007.7) ISBN 978-4-08-775379-0 / 253 pages / 1575 yen Cover Art/ Ayumi Shimoda | |
| "Odoriba" is a landing in a stairway in Japanese. The book contains seven stories including "Kooni-chan's Tomorrow" - The encounter of Illegal Iranian guy and Kooni (imaginally Japanese folklore creature) , both are alien in Tokyo, are connected in some way but still awkward to understand each other. The locale of each stories are set in a landing; which is used as a metaphor of the place; connecting inside and outside, now and past, or oneself and the others. (Translated in Korea) |
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Sekai no hateno Reggae Bar Reggae Bar at the End of the World |
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Futaba-sha (2005.10) ISBN 4-575-23538-5 / 336 pages / 1600 yen Cover Art/ Tomoso Nonaka | |
| Footloose and fancy-free Japanese high school boy Koh moves to New York City when his father's job is relocated there. Through the wandering of the downtown city streets, and meeting people at a shady reggae bar, he begins to learn the meaning of freedom, as well as the weight of life on his shoulders. Each chapter unfolds with a key raggae hit such as Bob Marley or Dennis Brown. |
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Katyusha |
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Riron sha (2005.3) ISBN 4-652-07756-4 / 270 pages / 1500 yen Cover art/ Yuki Kitamura | |
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Katyusha - a mysterious Russian-Japanese girl suddenly appears one day in front of Kajio, a "slow" Japanese high school boy.
Kajio lived in the tiny world of a mildly retarded boy, until Kathyusha opened a door for him into a whole new world.
This bittersweet boy-meets-girl story has not only a sentimental twist of romance, but also the painful war memories of Katyusha's Russian grandfather. (Nominated the 54th Shogakukan Children's Culture Publishing Award) |
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Teen Age |
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Futaba-sha (2004.11) ISBN 4-575-23509-1 / 264 pages / 1300 yen Cover Photograph/ Ai Ohashi | |
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An anthology of vivid short stories that tell "slice of (teenage) life" stories by the seven female authors; Hiromi Kawakami, Mitsuyo Kakuta, Rio Shimamoto,
Maiko Seo, Chiya Fujino, Michiko Yazuki, and Tomoso Nonaka. Nonaka's tale "Havana, Piano, and The Trail of the Light" takes us into the restless life of a modern Cuban boy Elian,
who falls in love with a Japanese girl during her trip to Havana.
(Translated in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau and Korea) |
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uchuu de ichiban akarui yane The Brightest Roof in the Universe |
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Poplar Publishing (2003.11) ISBN 4-591-07907-4 / 236 pages / 1200 yen Cover Art / Mifumi Mineta | |
| A blase teenage girl Tsubame spends her after-school hours on an empty rooftop of a building, to tranquilize the tiny irritations of life. The mysterious witch-like old woman Hoshibar suddenly appears, and confuses her pride. With a slowly budding friendship, Tsubame's ordinary days become filled with both painful and joyful episodes. |
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Flagler no kaijyo tetsudo
Flagler's Folly |
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Shueisha (2002.4) ISBN 4-08-775312-3 / 269 pages / 1600 yen Cover Photograph/ Tomoso Nonaka | |
| "Shu", a Japanese man who living in Tokyo, receives a letter from Lulu, his ex-lover who disappeared years ago after they had traveled to Key West, Florida. Their story follows the memory of another romance; Lulu's grandmother Atsue, and her poor Cuban immigrant lover Ruben, in the Keys of the 1930s. While Shu and Lulu are pursuing their fateful love, which started in the overseas railroad "Flagler's Folly", they are forced to a tragic end in the historical Labor Day hurricane of 1935. Along the way, he discovers that Lulu's emotional darkness is somehow related to the grandmother's unrevealed secret. |
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Pan no naru umi, hi no mau sora The sea of pan, The sky of scarlet |
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Shueisha (1999.1) ISBN 4-08-774382-9 / 214 pages / 1400 yen Cover Art/ Tomoso Nonaka | |
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(Received the 11th SHOSETSU SUBARU Literature Award) Greg, a New York City subway conductor, and Maya, a Tokyoite running way from her heartbreaking past love, meet in Trinidad & Tobago, where carnival and the sounds of the steel drum (known as a "pan") rouse their passion in each other. "Well described the scenery and craze of the tropics, as well as the sound of the music, that is difficult to translate into words, was brilliantly expressed." (Seiko Tanabe, Author and Akutagawa Award winner) |