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Showing posts with label translation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label translation. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2019

The Tale of the House of Physics by Yoko Ogawa and translated by Ted Goossen

For my next JLC12 read, I went with my favorite - Yoko Ogawa. Her short story, The Tale of the House of Physics was selected for The Penguin Book of Japanese Short Stories edited by Jay Rubin. As soon as I saw her name included, I just knew that I was going to be in for a treat. I LOVE all of her work that I've read and am currently counting down the days until I can read her latest book, The Memory Police.  I was thrilled to get a taste of her writing with this short story - its only made me even more excited to read her new book.

The Tale of the House of Physics is a quiet story. Its slow-paced, aches with emotion, and leaves you wanting. Or at least that is how I felt. I couldn't help but get swept away into this tale of a retired book editor recalling the very first book he ever edited.  He's written down a list of the books he has edited throughout his career and thinks back to his first one.  He was a child.  Across the street lived a woman who no one liked.  She lived in an abandoned building that had once house a facility researching particle physics.  No one knew how she came to be there, she was just there.  She didn't talk to anyone and would walk on the edge of the sidewalk.  The children loved to play at the House of Physics.  They would play in the garden and sit out on the front porch.  They weren't afraid of the woman in the house.  In fact, they would listen to her speak about being a writer. You see, she would talk to them, but she would never look any of them in the eye. And she would tell them about being a novelist and how she had written many books. When the children asked for proof, she told them that her books had been burned in the war.  She had nothing left to show them.  The children laughed and didn't believe a word she said.  They continued to play in the garden and even buried a dead weasel they found one time. One day our narrator notices something slightly off about the House of Physics.  He walks over and looks around. He enters the house and finds the woman covered up in a bed in the middle of the front room. She is sick. He runs to get help.  She slowly gets better and he winds up spending time with her.  As he sits next to her, he hears her mumbling.  It finally hits him that she is mumbling a story.  So he writes it all down. He binds the copy he writes and leaves it for her.  And then one day, she is gone. The house is empty and no one knows what happened to her.  Our narrator is left with his memory of the woman, her story, and the House of Physics.

That's the story in a nutshell. There are details I left out, so you can definitely experience it all for yourself when you get the chance to read it. And let me say, you should most definitely read it. I absolutely LOVED it. I loved getting to know this character as he reflected on his career and the House of Physics.  Ogawa captured a feeling of nostalgia, authenticity, and innocence.  She wrote about him with such clarity and emotion - it was superb. I loved reading about his perspective of the woman in the House of Physics.  It made me think about so many things: how strangers can have an impact on your life sometimes; how relationships can develop out of nowhere; how people have histories we are not aware of; and how stories truly are magical. Plus, the simple and elegant style of the story provides such a rich depth to it. Its truly a treat to read.

I would definitely recommend The Tale of the House of Physics to fans of Ogawa and anyone looking for their next great read - especially, if you love short stories.

And now, I'm off to figure out which book to read next. Yoshimoto or Murakami? Perhaps, I should read something by a new-to-me author. Hmm...what do you recommend?

Happy reading!!

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Mon amie américaine: A Novel by Michèle Halberstadt and Translated from the French by Bruce Benderson

(Thank you to the publisher for providing me with a copy of this book!)
about book:

When two colleagues become close friends they believe their friendship will last forever, but when one of them suffers a devastating illness, the bond between them is stretched to a breaking point. 

Two women are film industry colleagues and very close friends. Molly is a charismatic and dynamic Manhattan businesswoman until, at the age of forty, she has a brain aneurysm and falls into a month-long coma. Frightened and debilitated, she is a shadow of her former self.

Michèle, her Parisian friend, must grapple with these changes as she contemplates the nature of her relationship with a now-unrecognizable Molly. Is the bond the same when everything you once loved about a person has changed? What becomes of a friendship you once thought was unbreakable? Author Michèle Halberstadt explores the guilt that arises from these questions with grace and sensitivity.

my thoughts:

A quiet, emotional read that explores the depths of friendship. 

Two women who work in the film industry become close friends. One lives in Paris, while the other lives in Manhattan.  Molly is the American who travels all the time, is single, has bought a fancy new apartment, and is looking forward to the future.  Michèle is Parisian, she is married with kids, enjoys work, spends time with friends, and seems to be content with her life.  Suddenly, their lives are upended - Molly has a brain aneurysm and falls into a coma; Michèle finds out her husband has been cheating on her and that her best friend is in coma.  Eventually, Molly wakes up and moves in with her parents for a bit.  After some time, she moves into an apartment with a nurse.  However, Molly is not the same woman she once was.  She's quit her job, she refuses to help herself, and she believes the her life is pretty much over.  As a result of her new mindset, she's become mean, demanding, rude, and dismissive.  No one wants to be her friend anymore.  Michèle's visited Molly throughout it all and she has seen the changes in her friend.  However, she thinks everyone is exaggerating a bit.  Until her last visit to Molly's apartment where she witnesses her horrible behavior first hand.  She cant' believe this is her friend! What happened to Molly - the woman she once knew?!  And that is the crux of this story - how can a friendship continue to flourish following a life-changing experience?

Molly is gone.  She is now selfish and cruel.  Michèle is still the same.  She has problems she wishes she could discuss with her dear friend Molly, just like she used to be able to.  She has memories of the places they went, the laughs they shared, etc.  Except, now she no longer has that Molly in her life.  Instead, she has a new,surly Molly that she doesn't want to be around, let alone talk to about her problems.  In the beginning, Michèle understood that Molly was going through too much, so it would have to be all about Molly at the time.  Except, as time progressed and Molly's condition improved (as much as Molly would allow it to), she realized that she still couldn't talk to Molly (because Molly wouldn't care to listen to or even want to help her).  Yep, her friend Molly was no longer her friend.  Their friendship ended when Molly became someone else. 

Halberstadt explores friendship realistically and honestly in her story.  She writes about the ways in which friendships evolve and devolve. I love how she portrayed this deep friendship and its eventual demise.  I felt it was so true to life.  Friendships do change and end.  Sometimes, they can survive something like what Molly went through, but sometimes they can't.  Michèle cherished her friendship with Molly, but that was in the past.  The new Molly she met was not someone she could be friends with anymore.  It was heartbreaking, but true.  Halberstadt shows us how hard it was for Michèle to accept that her friendship with Molly was over.  She's open about the feelings of guilt and anguish that Michèle experienced through it all.   You can't help but empathize with Michèle and come to understand why she decides to no longer visit Molly when she's in town.  

Mon amie américaine is a terrific story about friendship.  Its slow-going, well-written, and mesmerizing.  I absolutely loved reading it!  What a perfect story to kick off Paris in July with!