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Asian Peoples & Cultures - Fiction & Literature, Phases of Life - Fiction, Crimes - Fiction, Japanese Fiction
Snakes and Earrings by Hitomi Kanehara — book cover

Snakes and Earrings

by Hitomi Kanehara, David Karashima
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Overview

"An electrifying international bestseller, Snakes and Earrings is the riveting story of a young girl's descent through the dark and disturbing underbelly of Tokyo."

Synopsis

"An electrifying international bestseller, Snakes and Earrings is the riveting story of a young girl's descent through the dark and disturbing underbelly of Tokyo."

Library Journal

Teenaged runaway Liu encounters Japan's youth underground-snakes with earrings-and eventually faces a life-or-death decision. A best seller in Japan and winner of the Akutagawa Prize. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Hitomi Kanehara

Hitomi Kanehara is one of the youngest authors to even win Japan's prestigious Akutagawa prize. She lives in Tokyo. This is her first novel.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Teenaged runaway Liu encounters Japan's youth underground-snakes with earrings-and eventually faces a life-or-death decision. A best seller in Japan and winner of the Akutagawa Prize. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

The author was only 20 when she won Japan's prestigious Akutagawa Prize for this lurid first novel, which will raise a few eyebrows stateside as well. Narrator Lui ("for Louis Vuitton") opens by relating her encounter with Ama, who has a forked tongue gotten through piercing followed by cutting, a process he's happy to describe in skin-crawling detail. Lui, who's already got enormous holes in her ear lobes, likes the idea of more pain, and when, for her initial tongue-piercing, Ama takes her to Desire, "a kind of punk/alternative store," she finds, in proprietor Shiba-san, someone happy to inflict it. Soon Lui is living with Ama, something of a wimp with her but tough enough to beat a man to death on the street and to have sadomasochistic sex with Shiba-san on the side. Kanehara's flat-affect portrait of teenagers operating totally outside traditional Japanese social constraints is both shocking and, from time to time, oddly touching: after telling Lui that "seeing you suffer makes me so hard," Shiba-san asks her to be his girlfriend, adding, "if we did get together, it would be with marriage in mind." The particulars are Japanese, but Lui's declaration, "I wanted to live recklessly and leave nothing but ashes in this dark, dull world," is the cry of alienated youth anywhere. Like the narrator, we grow oddly fond of her two messed-up guys, both emotionally pathetic but extremely dangerous. A bloody denouement and Lui's passive acceptance of it prove more disturbing than might be expected, given the story's brevity and deadpan delivery of the grossest facts. There's a peculiar, haunting beauty to her final question as she backs off from completing the tongue forking: "Was this really whatI had been chasing after? A useless, empty hole surrounded by raw flesh glistening with spittle?" Fascinating and unnerving, though it's hard to see where Kanehara can go further with such material.

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2007
Publisher
Penguin Group (USA)
Format
MP3 Book
ISBN
9780786554010

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