Ginny Tapley Takemori

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Meet Keiko.
Keiko is 36 years old. She's never had a boyfriend, and she's been working in the same supermarket for eighteen years.
Keiko's family wishes she'd get a proper job. Her friends wonder why she won't get married.
But Keiko knows what makes her happy, and she's not going to let anyone come between her and her convenience store...
*Convenience Store Woman comes in three different colours; the colour you receive will be chosen at random*
'If we want to understand what has been lost to time, there is no way other than through the exercise of imagination ... imagination applied with delicate rather than broad strokes'. So wrote the award winning Japanese author Kyoko Nakajima of her story, Things Remembered and Things Forgotten, a piece that illuminates, as if by throwing a switch, the layers of wartime devastation that lie just below the surface of Tokyo's insistently modern culture.
The ten acclaimed stories in this collection are pervaded by an air of Japanese ghostliness. In beautifully crafted and deceptively light prose, Nakajima portrays men and women beset by cultural amnesia and unaware of how haunted they are - by fragmented memories of war and occupation, by fading traditions, by buildings lost to firestorms and bulldozers, by the spirits of their recent past.
Available in e-book format in five separate volumes.
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Other works in English by Miyuki Miyabe:
All She Was Worth
Shadow Family
Crossfire
The Devil’s Whisper
The Dragon Sleeps
Available in e-book format in five separate volumes. Other e-books in English by Miyuki Miyabe:
Apparitions: Ghosts of Old Edo
The Book of Heroes
ICO: Castle in the Mist
Brave Story
Praise for Miyabe:
“A window into contemporary Japanese life.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Enormously compelling… combining expert pacing and psychological nuance to ultimately haunting effect.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Miyabe is a subtle observer of a country on the cusp. Her American readers can only hope for more chances to see through her eyes.”
—The Los Angeles Times
“Absorbing… an artful blending of puzzle-solving and social commentary.” —Washington Post
Available in e-book format in five separate volumes, to be released through spring 2016. Other e-books in English by Miyuki Miyabe:
Apparitions: Ghosts of Old Edo
The Book of Heroes
ICO: Castle in the Mist
Brave Story
Praise for Miyabe:
“A window into contemporary Japanese life.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Enormously compelling… combining expert pacing and psychological nuance to ultimately haunting effect.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Miyabe is a subtle observer of a country on the cusp. Her American readers can only hope for more chances to see through her eyes.”
—The Los Angeles Times
“Absorbing… an artful blending of puzzle-solving and social commentary.” —Washington Post
Available in e-book format in five separate volumes, to be released through summer 2016. Other e-books in English by Miyuki Miyabe:
Apparitions: Ghosts of Old Edo
The Book of Heroes
ICO: Castle in the Mist
Brave Story
Praise for Miyabe:
“A window into contemporary Japanese life.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Enormously compelling… combining expert pacing and psychological nuance to ultimately haunting effect.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Miyabe is a subtle observer of a country on the cusp. Her American readers can only hope for more chances to see through her eyes.”
—The Los Angeles Times
“Absorbing… an artful blending of puzzle-solving and social commentary.” —Washington Post
Volume 2 delves into the lives of these two childhood friends and the unhealthy dynamic in their relationship: one tormented by the ghost of an elder sister who died soon after birth; the other gentle but slow-witted and easily exploited.
And behind the pair a third childhood friend, Peace: devious and cunning, a master manipulator.
Available in e-book format in five separate volumes, to be released through February 2016.
Other works in English by Miyuki Miyabe:
All She Was Worth
Shadow Family
Crossfire
The Devil’s Whisper
The Sleeping Dragon
Praise for Miyabe:
“A window into contemporary Japanese life.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Enormously compelling… combining expert pacing and psychological nuance to ultimately haunting effect.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Miyabe is a subtle observer of a country on the cusp. Her American readers can only hope for more chances to see through her eyes.”
—The Los Angeles Times
“Absorbing… an artful blending of puzzle-solving and social commentary.”
—Washington Post
A young Tokyoite doctor accepts a post on a remote island south of Okinawa. When a highly contagious fatal disease breaks out, he has to choose between saving himself or saving others.
A hormone-ridden teenage youth left alone with his young stepmother following his father’s death is consumed with jealousy as her affections turn to another man.
A journalist in search of answers travels from the metropolis to a bleak shore on the Japan Sea and eventually the furthest extreme of ice-bound Hokkaido, as he investigates the suicide of a young man.
In a backstreet of the metropolis, a wily old detective follows his hunches to nail the murderer of a young prostitute.
A conflict arises between two detectives investigating the shocking suicide of a 6-year-old child, the son of a young actress famed for her immoral behavior. Can it really be suicide, or is it murder?
In this early collection of five short stories, Kyotaro Nishimura explores the criminal mind and what makes people do the unthinkable.
The Little House is set in the early years of the Showa era (1926-89), when Japan's situation is becoming increasingly tense but has not yet fully immersed in a wartime footing. On the outskirts of Tokyo, near a station on a private train line, stands a modest European style house with a red, triangular shaped roof. There a woman named Taki has worked as a maidservant in the house and lived with its owners, the Hirai family. Now, near the end of her life, Taki is writing down in a notebook her nostalgic memories of the time spent living in the house. Her journal captures the refined middle-class life of the time from her gentle perspective. At the end of the novel, however, a startling final chapter is added. The chapter brings to light, after Taki's death, a fact not described in her notebook. This suddenly transforms the world that had been viewed through the lens of a nostalgic memoir, so that a dramatic, flesh-and-blood story takes shape. Nakajima manages to combine skillful dialogue with a dazzling ending. The result is a polished, masterful work fully deserving of the Naoki Prize.
'I am still unable to leave the burnt-out ruins'Akiyuki Nosaka, 2014
In 1945, Akiyuki Nosaka lived through the Allied firebombing of Kobe. His father and mother were killed in the raid. His sister died shortly afterwards. The unforgettably powerful stories in this book are inspired by his memories of that time.
A lonely whale searches the oceans for a mate, and sacrifices himself for love; a mother desperately tries to save her son with her tears; a huge, magnificent tree grows amid the ruins of a burnt-out town, its branches made from the sweetest cake imaginable.
Profound, heartbreaking and aglow with a piercing beauty, these stories express the chaos and terror of conflict, yet also reveal how love can illuminate even the darkest moment.
Akiyuki Nosaka was born in 1930 in Japan, and was a member of the yakeato generation, 'the generation of the ashes', who survived the devastating firebombing of Japan during the Second World War. Nosaka was an award-winning novelist, short-story writer, essayist, lyricist, singer and politician. His adoptive parents were killed in the Allied firebombing of Kobe, and after he was evacuated with his sister, she died of malnutrition. These experiences inspired the stories in this collection, as well as one of his best-known works, Grave of the Fireflies, which was turned into a hugely successful Studio Ghibli film (called 'a masterpiece' by the Guardian), and which is forthcoming in a new translation from Pushkin Press. Nosaka died in 2015.
A magical miniature family's adventures in wartime Japan
In a dusty library, in the quietest corner of a house in a Tokyo suburb, live the Little People: Fern and Balbo, Robin and Iris. Just a few inches high, sleeping in cigarette boxes and crafting shoes from old book jackets, they need only one thing from their Humans - a nightly glass of milk, served in a sparkling Blue Glass goblet, by a trusted young member of the Human family.
But when the Second World War comes to Japan, bringing a dangerous new kind of patriotism, both Humans and their beloved Little People face a world they could never before have imagined. It will take great love, bravery, and a rather loyal pigeon, to bring their unique families back together once more...
Born in Tokyo in 1924, Tomiko Inui joined a publishing house in 1950, where she began working as an editor, as well as writing books for children. She published many books over her long career, winning prizes along the way including the Mainishi Publishing Culture Award and the Akaitori Award for Children's Literature. She was also runner-up in 1964 for the Hans Christian Andersen prize. The Secret of the Blue Glass is the first of her books to be translated into English. She died in 2002.
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