![]() To give you an example, the collection opens with ‘Afternoon at the Bakery’ in which a woman visits a bakery to buy two strawberry shortcakes for her son’s birthday. It’s all very cleverly constructed and part of the satisfaction in reading Revenge comes from spotting the connections between characters, scenes and narrative fragments throughout the collection. Characters flow from one story to the next we revisit specific locations and scenes from earlier tales, only to see things from a different viewpoint as our perspective has changed. ![]() Revenge is a stunning yet unsettling collection of eleven interlinked short stories while each individual tale works as a short story in its own right, they are elegantly connected by a set of recurring images and signifiers threaded through the stories. ![]() ![]() Ogawa is one of two female writers from Japan to make the cut this year the other is Hiromi Kawakami for her novel Strange Weather in Tokyo which both Naomi and I have already reviewed for January in Japan, an annual focus on Japanese literature hosted by blogger (and fellow IFFP shadow-judge) Tony Malone ( My review Naomi’s review.) When the independent Foreign Fiction Prize (IFFP) longlist was announced in early March, I was thrilled to see Yoko Ogawa’s Revenge among the contenders. ![]() I have to say I’m very keen to read this now. Today it’s Jacqui’s second Independent Foreign Fiction Prize review. ![]()
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