Book Description
After several years in the U.S. a Japanese woman returns to Japan, taking along a niece raised in the U.S. The novel describes their adjustment to Japanese culture, different for each generation.
Author : Lydia Yuri Minatoya
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
Page : 390 pages
File Size : 26,23 MB
Release : 2001
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 9780393321401
After several years in the U.S. a Japanese woman returns to Japan, taking along a niece raised in the U.S. The novel describes their adjustment to Japanese culture, different for each generation.
Author : Lydia Yuriko Minatoya
Publisher :
Page : 392 pages
File Size : 31,14 MB
Release : 1999
Category : Fiction
ISBN :
From the multiple-award-winning author of Talking to High Monks in the Snow comes a searing tale of three daughters of Japan whose strained reunion on the brink of World War II challenges each in her identity, spirit, and capacity to love. When Etsuko Sone's sister dies in childbirth in Seattle's seedy Japantown, love for the surviving child catapults Etsuko back across the Pacific and into the austere samurai household of her mysterious mother, Chie-a woman who rejected Etsuko at birth. The dubious reconciliation is for the sake of young Hanae, that she might learn her Fuji heritage and the Zen lessons of grace, humility, temperance, and dignity. But while Etsuko and Chie do their best to school Hanae, Japan is rapidly changing. Wartime reparations strip her people of clothing and food even as the imperial army cuts into Chinese Manchuria. Accusations of treachery, of antipatriotism, begin to rain on the Fuji household. It is then that the women realize that their separate independence is their common bond. And it is then that Etsuko finds hidden strength to pursue meaning and beauty in a situation beyond her control. Told with an unerring feel for cultural, historical, and familial confusions and a poet's ear and eye, The Strangeness of Beauty is a triumphant love story, a celebration of the capacity for transcendence that exists in every one of us.
Author : Lydia Yuriko Minatoya
Publisher :
Page : 383 pages
File Size : 40,85 MB
Release : 2001
Category : Japan
ISBN :
After several years in the U.S. a Japanese woman returns to Japan, taking along a niece raised in the U.S. The novel describes their adjustment to Japanese culture, different for each generation.
Author : Lydia Minatoya
Publisher : Harper Collins
Page : 292 pages
File Size : 42,85 MB
Release : 1993-02-17
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0060923725
Winner of the 1991 PEN/Jerard Fund Award, Talking to High Monks in the Snow captures the passion and intensity of an Asian-American woman's search for cultural identity.
Author : George Johnson
Publisher : Vintage
Page : 447 pages
File Size : 28,90 MB
Release : 2010-09-29
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0307765458
With a New Afterword "Our knowledge of fundamental physics contains not one fruitful idea that does not carry the name of Murray Gell-Mann."--Richard Feynman Acclaimed science writer George Johnson brings his formidable reporting skills to the first biography of Nobel Prize-winner Murray Gell-Mann, the brilliant, irascible man who revolutionized modern particle physics with his models of the quark and the Eightfold Way. Born into a Jewish immigrant family on New York's East 14th Street, Gell-Mann's prodigious talent was evident from an early age--he entered Yale at 15, completed his Ph.D. at 21, and was soon identifying the structures of the world's smallest components and illuminating the elegant symmetries of the universe. Beautifully balanced in its portrayal of an extraordinary and difficult man, interpreting the concepts of advanced physics with scrupulous clarity and simplicity, Strange Beauty is a tour-de-force of both science writing and biography.
Author : Orhan Pamuk
Publisher : Penguin UK
Page : 643 pages
File Size : 29,63 MB
Release : 2015-10-06
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 9385890034
Since his boyhood in a poor village in Central Anatolia, Mevlut Karatas has fantasized about what his life would become. Not getting as far in school as he'd hoped, at the age of twelve, he comes to Istanbul-"the center of the world"-and is immediately enthralled both by the city being demolished and the new one that is fast being built. He follows his father's trade, selling boza on the street, and hopes to become rich like other villagers who have settled on the desolate hills outside the booming metropolis. But chance seems to conspire against him. He spends three years writing love letters to a girl he saw just once at a wedding, only to elope by mistake with her sister. And though he grows to cherish his wife and the family they have, his relations all make their fortunes while his own years are spent in a series of jobs leading nowhere; he is sometimes attracted to the politics of his friends and intermittently to the lodge of a religious guide. But every evening, without fail, he still wanders the streets of Istanbul, selling boza and wondering at the "strangeness" in his mind, the sensation that makes him feel different from everyone else, until fortune conspires once more to let him understand at last what it is he has always yearned for. Told from the perspectives of many beguiling characters, A Strangeness in My Mind is a modern epic of coming of age in a great city, and a mesmerizing narrative sure to take its place among Pamuk's finest achievements.
Author : Hiromi Kawakami
Publisher : Catapult
Page : 205 pages
File Size : 48,84 MB
Release : 2017-11-01
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 1640090177
Shortlisted for the 2013 Man Asian Literary Prize, Strange Weather in Tokyo is a story of loneliness and love that defies age. Tsukiko, thirty–eight, works in an office and lives alone. One night, she happens to meet one of her former high school teachers, "Sensei," in a local bar. Tsukiko had only ever called him "Sensei" ("Teacher"). He is thirty years her senior, retired, and presumably a widower. Their relationship develops from a perfunctory acknowledgment of each other as they eat and drink alone at the bar, to a hesitant intimacy which tilts awkwardly and poignantly into love. As Tsukiko and Sensei grow to know and love one another, time's passing is marked by Kawakami's gentle hints at the changing seasons: from warm sake to chilled beer, from the buds on the trees to the blooming of the cherry blossoms. Strange Weather in Tokyo is a moving, funny, and immersive tale of modern Japan and old–fashioned romance.
Author : A. L. Snijders
Publisher : New Directions Publishing
Page : 158 pages
File Size : 50,61 MB
Release : 2021-10-05
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 0811228576
Brevity is the soul of beauty in these tiny masterworks of short short fiction Gorgeously translated by Lydia Davis, the miniature stories of A. L. Snijders might concern a lost shoe, a visit with a bat, fears of travel, a dream of a man who has lost a glass eye: uniting them is their concision and their vivacity. Lydia Davis in her introduction delves into her fascination with the pleasures and challenges of translating from a language relatively new to her. She also extols Snijders’s “straightforward approach to storytelling, his modesty and his thoughtfulness.” Selected from many hundreds in the original Dutch, the stories gathered here—humorous, or bizarre, or comfortingly homely—are something like daybook entries, novels-in-brief, philosophical meditations, or events recreated from life, but—inhabiting the borderland between fiction and reality—might best be described as autobiographical mini-fables. This morning at 11:30, in the full sun, I go up into the hayloft where I haven’t been for years. I climb over boxes and shelving, and open the door. A frightened owl flies straight at me, dead quiet, as quiet as a shadow can fly, I look into his eyes—he’s a large owl, it’s not strange that I’m frightened too, we frighten each other. I myself thought that owls never move in the daytime. What the owl thinks about me, I don’t know.
Author : Cynthia Jean Hahn
Publisher : Penn State Press
Page : 318 pages
File Size : 18,81 MB
Release : 2012
Category : Art
ISBN : 0271050780
"A study of reliquaries as a form of representation in medieval art. Explores how reliquaries stage the importance and meaning of relics using a wide range of artistic means from material and ornament to metaphor and symbolism"--Provided by publisher.
Author : Andrew Klavan
Publisher : Zondervan
Page : 270 pages
File Size : 12,16 MB
Release : 2022-04-05
Category : Religion
ISBN : 0310364620
Follow Andrew Klavan to a deeper, richer understanding of the words of Jesus. Andrew Klavan believed what he read in the Gospels, but he often struggled to understand what Jesus really meant. So he began a journey of wrestling with the beautiful and often strange words of Jesus. He learned Greek in order to read the Gospels in their original languages, and he vowed to set aside any preconceptions about what the Scriptures say. But it wasn't until he began exploring how some of history's greatest writers wrestled with the same issues we confront today--political upheaval, rejection of social norms, growing disbelief in God--that he found a new way of understanding what Jesus meant. In The Truth and Beauty, Klavan combines a decades-long writing career with a lifetime of reading to discover a fresh understanding of the Gospels. By reading the words of Jesus through the life and work of writers such as William Wordsworth and John Keats, Mary Shelley and Samuel Taylor Coleridge--the English romantics--Klavan discovered a way to encounter Jesus in a deeper and more profound way than ever before. For readers seeking to find renewed meaning in the words of Jesus--and for those who are striving for belief in a materialistic world--The Truth and Beauty offers an intimate account of one man's struggle to understand the Gospels in all their strangeness, and so find his way to a life that is, as he says, "the most creative, the most joyful, and surely the most true."