Particularize About Books The Silent Cry
Title | : | The Silent Cry |
Author | : | Kenzaburō Ōe |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 288 pages |
Published | : | 1998 by Kodansha (first published 1967) |
Categories | : | Fiction. Cultural. Japan. Asian Literature. Japanese Literature. Literature |
Kenzaburō Ōe
Paperback | Pages: 288 pages Rating: 3.86 | 2687 Users | 224 Reviews
Narration During Books The Silent Cry
Two brothers, Takashi and Mitsu, return from Tokyo to the village of their childhood. The selling of their family home leads them to an inescapable confrontation with their family history. Their attempt to escape the influence of the city ends in failure as they realize that its tentacles extend to everything in the countryside, including their own relationship. In 1994, Kenzaburo Oe was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Signalling out The Silent Cry, the Nobel Committee stated that his poetic force creates an imagined world, where life and myth condense to form a disconcerting picture of the human predicament. Kenzaburo Oe is one of the great writers of the century and The Silent Cry is his masterpiece.Define Books As The Silent Cry
Original Title: | 万延元年のフットボール (Man'en Gannen no Futtobōru) |
ISBN: | 1852426020 (ISBN13: 9781852426026) |
Edition Language: | English |
Characters: | Mitsusaburo Nedokoro, Takashi Nedokoro |
Setting: | Japan |
Literary Awards: | Tanizaki Prize 谷崎潤一郎賞 (1967) |
Rating About Books The Silent Cry
Ratings: 3.86 From 2687 Users | 224 ReviewsWrite Up About Books The Silent Cry
I plucked this from the library shelf in my quest to read more serious Japanese authors, and more Nobel Prize winners (Al Gore excepted). (Literature Nobels.) Ōe was not really a household name, in my household. He merged Japanesely with other writers like Yukio Mishima, Natsume Sōseki, and Shūsaku Endō, whose names I would sometimes spot on the shelves at the local used book shop, and mostly ignore.The Silent Cry (1967) feels like serious writing, Nobel writing, dense with meaning, although atA mesmerising read. Mesmerising not in a beautiful, sweetly lyrical sense but gripping, dark and brutally frank. Piercing, insightful metaphors and phrases abound. The opening chapter was so amazing, I thought I had found another 'Vegetarian'. Alas, the one drawback was that I found the plot, based on a present day uprising aimed at reenacting another which happened a hundred years before, not very interesting in and of itself. It would have been better if the middle part, which dwelled a bit
Peasants, forest, revolution! Supermarket! Complementary brotherpairs, whiskey, ruffians, storehouse, ritualized violence!Seemed diffuse and evocative. Wish I knew more about 1970s Japanese peasantry. Interesting parallels to fiction re: Chinese Cultural Revolution.Trauma, shame, guilt, guilt, guilt.Overwhelmingly sad. But in an abstract sense.
a great novel held back by a weak translation and (in my edition) a weirdly small font. still, this novel felt like the purest expression of oe's grotesque realism: fatalistic, ambiguous. it bleeds existential pain
If you are looking for a book that has incest, rape, suicides, murder, bad relationships and no time for humor with a lord of the flies vibe set in Japan, this book is for you.
Kenzaburō Ōe uses an historical 1860 uprising as the basis for his dark novel of two bothers soul-searching, and enduring a personal crisis in postwar Japan, a world where existence and myth deliquesce to form a disturbing picture of the human predicament. With reverberating touches of Dostoevsky and Mishima, Ōe's powerful story concerns that of Mitsusaburo, the married older brother living and working out of Tokyo, and Takashi, young and confident returning from the United States after being
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