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Darkness in Summer by Takeshi Kaiko — book cover

Darkness in Summer

by Takeshi Kaiko, Cecilia Segawa Seigle
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Overview

"This intensely modern novel provides vivid insights ." —Ivan Morris

Darkness in Summer is the story of former lovers, separated for ten years, meeting again. Now, incapable of love, they are brought together by desire and mutual desperation. They savor their world together, unaware that it may unravel again.

Synopsis

"This intensely modern novel provides vivid insights ." --Ivan Morris

Darkness in Summer is the story of former lovers, separated for ten years, meeting again. Now, incapable of love, they are brought together by desire and mutual desperation. They savor their world together, unaware that it may unravel again.

Publishers Weekly

A recipient of Japan's prestigious Akutagawa, Kawabata and Mainichi prizes, Kaiko makes his English-language debut with this languidly voluptuous, curiously dated novel about a love affair doomed by the vague woes of modernity. Reunited in 1968, a Japanese man and woman share a decade of accumulated expatriate angst in West Germany during a sensual reverie of many weeks' length, pursuing sexual hunger to the hilt but finding, at best, a sad satiety. ``I feel as if I am turning into an earthworm that does nothing but eat and defecate,'' the narrator complains, rendered ``indolent to the point of paralysis'' by his incurable anomie and her unspeakable misery. ``My body sags under the mere weight of my internal monologues, and it is beyond the capacity of my feet to carry it.'' Kaiko's lushly sensuous version of existential despair takes itself so seriously that unintentionally comic moments intrude, especially in breathily lofty dialogue. Though striking in its evocation of physical detail and devotion to despondency, the novel lacks the energy and art needed to animate a view of life as abject anticlimax. (Apr.)

About the Author, Takeshi Kaiko

Takeshi Kaiko (1930-1989), winner of his country's highest literary awards-both the Akutagawa and the Mainichi-was born and raised in Osaka. He is ranked by Japanese critics, with Kobo Abe, as one of Japan's two most important novelists of the generation since Mishima.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

A recipient of Japan's prestigious Akutagawa, Kawabata and Mainichi prizes, Kaiko makes his English-language debut with this languidly voluptuous, curiously dated novel about a love affair doomed by the vague woes of modernity. Reunited in 1968, a Japanese man and woman share a decade of accumulated expatriate angst in West Germany during a sensual reverie of many weeks' length, pursuing sexual hunger to the hilt but finding, at best, a sad satiety. ``I feel as if I am turning into an earthworm that does nothing but eat and defecate,'' the narrator complains, rendered ``indolent to the point of paralysis'' by his incurable anomie and her unspeakable misery. ``My body sags under the mere weight of my internal monologues, and it is beyond the capacity of my feet to carry it.'' Kaiko's lushly sensuous version of existential despair takes itself so seriously that unintentionally comic moments intrude, especially in breathily lofty dialogue. Though striking in its evocation of physical detail and devotion to despondency, the novel lacks the energy and art needed to animate a view of life as abject anticlimax. Apr.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2005
Publisher
Periplus Editions (HK) Ltd.
Pages
216
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780804833257

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