In the High Peaks
















Tuesday, June 7, 2022

First of 20: All the Lovers in the Night by Mieko Kawakami

This is my first book I've read for The Twenty Books of Summer.

I’m really glad that I happened upon a positive, very brief review of Japanese author Mieko Kawakami’s recently translated novel, All the Lovers in the Night, which was published in a Europa edition in 2022. I knew nothing about Kawakami prior to discovering this book, but after reading it, I’ve searched for more information about her and her work. Kawakami’s most well-known novel is Breast and Eggs.

     Before I describe my wonderful experience with this book, I want to say that the title utterly baffles me, based on my reading of the book and what it is about. So I wonder: Is this a translation of the original Japanese title of the novel? Really? Or, is it, as happens all too frequently, a title slapped on by the publisher, all because a strict Japanese translation of the title would mean nothing to English language readers?

     So, no, I feel I can say with purpose, that this is most assuredly not a book about lovers in the night.

     It is, however, a book about a single woman in her mid-thirties, who lives an incredibly solitary life in the midst of a large city. She works as a copy-editor/proofreader. Her work hours are long and are spent scrutinizing manuscripts for errors, a job that occupies her for 10-14 hours a day, depending. She has no true friends, no family or social life, nor does she have any leisure time activities. She has a television, but never watches because she hates the noise. She appears to be an empty shell. Actually, I was spellbound that this was the sum total of her existence. How can a person live like this and survive?

     What’s fascinating is to observe her slow, plodding, and messy efforts to break out, which creates all the dramatic tension. I was wholly absorbed by everything she tried and her flawed attempts. Brilliantly portrayed by Kawakami.

     She does meet a nice man, in his late fifties, who becomes a catalyst. I loved how this entire relationship was handled.

     I highly recommend this novel.

5 comments:

  1. Hey Judith, This definitely sounds like a "me" book and, I do have a copy! Glad you enjoyed it. I read another book by this author called: Heaven. It was quite dark but I liked it a lot. Link to my review:http://bibliophilebythesea.blogspot.com/2021/06/87-2021-heaven-mieko-kawakami.html

    Have you read anything by Sayaka Murata? She is another Japanese author who writes a darker story but, I love her writing: Convenience Store Woman and Earthlings. She has a short story collection coming out this summer called: Life Ceremony.

    Hope the rest of your summer reads are just as good.

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    1. Hi Diane,
      I am adding Heaven to my list of books to read this fall and later, after the "20 Books of Summer."
      I'd also like to try Murata. Thanks for the suggestions!

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  2. Great review, Judith. The book sounds very good. My husband was looking at this in the bookstore recently but neither of us knew much about the book. I will pass your thoughts along to him.

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    1. It's a short novel, and in some ways very different from most of what I usually read. I think it's about 212 pages, that's all.

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    2. You make me want to read this one! It's weird about the title, though. :)

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