Banana Yoshimoto
Autor/a de Kitchen
Sobre l'autor
Banana Yoshimoto, 1964 - Novelist Banana Yoshimoto was born Mahoko Yoshimoto on July 24, 1964 in Tokyo, Japan. She is the daughter of poet and commentator Yoshimoto Ryumei, who had an impact on the radical student movement of the late 1960's. She attended Tokyo's Nihon University, where she studied mostra'n més creative writing and won a faculty award for her 1987 graduation novel "Moonlight Shadow." While working as a waitress, she took moments out of her day to write a novel and, at the age of 24, the result was "Kitchen" (1988), which is the story of a lonely woman who moves her bed into the kitchen, finding comfort in the humming of the refrigerator. She also wrote "Pineapple Pudding" and "Fruit Basket," which were both bestsellers. Her novel "Lizard" was dedicated to the memory of the late rocker Kurt Cobain and the novel "Long Night of Marika/Bali Dream Diary" (1996) was considered a flop. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra'n menys
Crèdit de la imatge: Eiichiro
Sèrie
Obres de Banana Yoshimoto
Banana Yoshimoto 4 exemplars
La voce del cuore 2 exemplars
Hard Luck 1 exemplars
B Kyū Banana 1 exemplars
Eldhús 1 exemplars
HH 1 exemplars
Only thing of rice and 100 talk a little (Asahi Bunko) (2013) ISBN: 4022647051 [Japanese Import] (2013) 1 exemplars
Hard-Boiled Wonderland 1 exemplars
Ein seltsamer Ort 1 exemplars
Ein seltsamer Ort 1 exemplars
1994 1 exemplars
Vĩnh biệt Tugumi 1 exemplars
Thằn Lằn 1 exemplars
Say ngủ 1 exemplars
Sueño profundo 1 exemplars
Un’esperienza (Italian Edition) 1 exemplars
Oltre la finestra (Italian Edition) 1 exemplars
Le piramidi stanno a guardare 1 exemplars
Un sogno gentile 1 exemplars
Daisy's Life (Hardcover) (Chinese Edition) 1 exemplars
Yoko-yoshimotobanana.com of love 2006 (Mass Market Paperback) (2007) ISBN: 410135930X [Japanese Import] 1 exemplars
Hồ 1 exemplars
Obres associades
The Art of the Story: An International Anthology of Contemporary Short Stories (1999) — Col·laborador — 345 exemplars
Freedom: Stories Celebrating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (2009) — Col·laborador — 73 exemplars
Etiquetat
Coneixement comú
- Nom normalitzat
- Yoshimoto, Banana
- Nom oficial
- Yoshimoto, Mahoko
- Data de naixement
- 1964-07-24
- Gènere
- female
- Nacionalitat
- Japan
- Lloc de naixement
- Bunkyo-ku, Tokio, Japan
- Llocs de residència
- Tokio, Japan
- Educació
- Nihon University (Art College, Literature)
- Professions
- writer
- Relacions
- Yoshimoto, Takaaki (vader)
- Premis i honors
- The 6th Kaien Newcomer Writers Prize (1987)
Umitsubame First Novel Prize
Membres
Ressenyes
Llistes
Premis
Potser també t'agrada
Autors associats
Estadístiques
- Obres
- 114
- També de
- 7
- Membres
- 13,882
- Popularitat
- #1,663
- Valoració
- 3.6
- Ressenyes
- 348
- ISBN
- 434
- Llengües
- 26
- Preferit
- 73
Translated by Megan Backus
Read by Yolande Bavan
I’ve given Banana Yoshimoto’s pen name because it was the name she gave herself in the 1980s when the book was published. Her birth name is Mahoko Yoshimoto, and the title “Kitchen” was the “borrowed-name” of the book; it was the original title and not translated from Japanese.
The book is divided into two parts, the novel “Kitchen” and the novella “Moonlight Shadow”.
I decided to read Kitchen after discovering it was an instant best seller when it was published in Japan, and I was intrigued by the title and the author’s name. I was expecting from these, a quirky novel, along the lines of some other Japanese books I’ve read.
It’s not quirky at all. Both the novel and the novella embrace the themes of coping with the sudden death of a loved one. Both are optimistic, with the survivors moving forward after periods of mourning.
The prose in both stories come across as choppy in parts. I first thought this was due to the translations, but later read it was the original Japanese. What was interesting about the book was the subtle and tender way it dealt with the emotions of mourning. At times the novella Moon Shadow was extremely touching. This may have been because of my own experience of young love. In any case I liked the novella more than I liked the novel.
There were times of unintended humor. Being a lover of Japanese food it was surprising to read of young people praising meal of Kentucky Fried Chicken. Here and there there are signs of Western influence in the writing, and this plus the choppiness of the prose takes from the gentle feel Mahoko Yoshimoto engenders so well in the two stories.
If you like Japanese literature, Kitchen delivers a pleasant read. For me Kitchen is a good but not a memorable book and I rated it a nuanced 3.… (més)