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Five Thousand Runaways by Takeshi Kaiko — book cover

Five Thousand Runaways

by Takeshi Kaiko
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Overview

Seven stories that span a 20-year period in the life of one of Japan’s greatest writers. Written with humor and keen perception, Kaiko introduces the reader to a fascinating range of characters.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The constantly moving camera eye in this collection of eight stories covering a 20-year period in the career of the prolific Japanese writer records the most vivid images and events in the loosely woven narratives. The sheer profusion of detail can also prove the narratives' undoing. A deadly moment such as the lethal combat between mongoose and snake can be gruesomely effective; so can the frying of rat-meat for a delightful repast. But excessive minutiae visual and auditory describing the seamy life of Saigon and Cholon during the Vietnam War mars the potentially fascinating ``Festivities by the River.'' The title story refers to a sociological category of men who unaccountably disappear and assume a new life elsewhere. The central character, a dull, methodical caricature of a conventional corporate finance official in Tokyo, suddenly ``frees himself from all anchors'' of wife and child, work and routine, and returns to his native Osaka to drift, isolate himself and finally resume a more sordid version of his old work by keeping the books of a squalid dance hall. Kaiko (Into a Black Sun) is an observant, speculative writer whose impressive skills seem somewhat cramped in the short story genre. (September)

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1990
Publisher
Peter Owen Ltd
Pages
200
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780720607703

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