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Rain in the Wind: Four Stories
 
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Rain in the Wind: Four Stories [Paperback]

Saiichi Maruya (Author), Dennis Keene (Translator)


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Book Description

August 1992
A middle-aged businessman reliving a murderous punch-up that happened in his youth; a chatterbox bar girl cheerfully describing her involvement in a customer's fantasy life; a novelist puzzling over an obsession with tree shadows; and a scholar dabbling irresponsibly in the biography of a famous modern poet.

This is the rich and varied world into which you are invited, a world of only half-solved puzzles for its inhabitants: the scholar, for example, discovers a tragedy in his own past in place of the impersonal facts he sought; the novelist, in his search for the origins of his strange preoccupation, encounters a woman who improbably claims to be his mother. It is a world of brilliant surfaces: satirical, at times to the point of parody; incisive, at times to the point of cruelty. A world also of sudden depths, the mind at last confronting truths it prefers not to acknowledge.

These two short stories and two novellas ("Tree Shadows" was awarded the 1988 Kawabata Prize) make up the second volume of Maruya's fiction to appear in English. His novel Singular Rebellion was acclaimed internationally as "a superb piece of urban fiction." This new collection should serve both to confirm his reputation and to give readers a better idea of the scope of his writing.

Here is a writer who not only sees the profoundly comic side of human life, but subtly reveals--without resorting to that aggressive sentimentalism which makes some Japanese literature so hard for Western readers to take--its pathos: the fact that we are all emigrants from a past we remember only too little of. It haunts us, and we try to reconstruct it, but most of what is important in it escapes us.

When Singular Rebellion appeared, Anthony Burgess generously hailed Maruya as a major comic novelist. With this second volume, the limitation of the word "comic" may, we believe, be dispensed with. Maruya's later A Mature Woman has gone one step further to confirm his reputation.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Despite their competent translation, these four stories probably work better for a Japanese readership than for Americans. Maruya ( Singular Rebellion ) echoes Borges and Pirandello in "Tree Shadows" with a narrator who, preoccupied with trees' shadows, spins a tale about a grand old man of letters beset by the same obsession and by a half-mad woman who may be his mother. It's a strained parable that also satirizes Japan's overdose of Western culture. In the novella that gives the book its title, a college professor finds in a volume of haiku clues to his deceased father's possible encounter with an alcoholic itinerant poet in pre-war Japan. His sleuthing casts light on Japan's fascist past and turns up his father's dark secret, but his hair-splitting saps the reader's interest. "I'll Buy That Dream," about a fibbing Ginza bargirl, and "The Gentle Downhill Slope," in which a student indulges in a brothel spree, are bantering, facile allegories on the fragmentary quality of life.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

"A brilliant stylist and tale spinner." -- San Francisco Chronicle

"A brilliant stylist and tale spinner."--San Francisco Chronicle -- San Francisco Chronicle

"A fascinating marriage of Borges and Nabokov with Japanese literary tradition." -- Times Literary Supplement

"A fascinating marriage of Borges and Nabokov with Japanese literary tradition."--Times Literary Supplement -- Times Literary Supplement

"A keenly satiric observer.... A remarkably fluid and beautifully voiced narration." -- New York Times Book Review

"A keenly satiric observer.... A remarkably fluid and beautifully voiced narration."--New York Times Book Review -- New York Times Book Review

"Gripping, touching, cool, funny, persistently interesting and surprising." -- Independent

"Gripping, touching, cool, funny, persistently interesting and surprising."--Independent -- Independent

"Rich in insight and wry commentary." -- Kirkus Review

"Rich in insight and wry commentary."--Kirkus Review -- Kirkus Review

Product Details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Kodansha International (JPN) (August 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 4770015585
  • ISBN-13: 978-4770015587
  • Product Dimensions: 7.1 x 4.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,551,634 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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