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Banana Yoshimoto

    24 juillet 1964

    Banana Yoshimoto est une auteure japonaise dont l'œuvre est célébrée pour sa voix distinctive et ses profondes explorations de la condition humaine. Elle aborde des thèmes tels que l'amour, la perte, la famille et la quête d'identité dans la société contemporaine. Yoshimoto capture magistralement l'essence de la vie quotidienne, révélant subtilement les luttes intérieures et les aspirations de ses personnages. Sa prose se caractérise par sa qualité lyrique, son souci du détail et sa capacité exquise à transmettre les moments éphémères qui façonnent nos vies.

    Banana Yoshimoto
    Lizard
    Goodbye Tsugumi
    Asleep
    Dead-End Memories
    Dead End Memories
    Kitchen
    • Kitchen

      • 180pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,9(84448)Évaluer

      Que faire à vingt ans, après la mort d'une grand-mère, quand on se retrouve sans famille et qu'on aime les cuisines plus que tout au monde? Se pelotonner contre le frigo, chercher dans son ronronnement un prélude au sommeil, un remède à la solitude. Cette vie semi-végétative de Mikage, l'héroïne de Kitchen, est un jour troublée par un garçon. Yûichi Tanabe, qui l'invite à partager l'appartement où il loge avec sa mère. Mikage s'installe donc en parasite chez les Tanabe : tombée instantanément amoureuse de leur magnifique cuisine, elle est séduite par Eriko, la " mère " de Yûichi. Eriko, personnage ambigu et pur, transsexuel à la beauté éblouissante, qui, traversant le récit comme un soleil éphémère, va bientôt mourir à son tour de mort violente... Banana Yoshimoto révèle dans Kitchen, à travers une sorte de " minimalisme fou ", une sensibilité nourrie de paradoxes, une sensibilité dans laquelle toute une génération de jeunes Japonais s'est reconnue.

      Kitchen
    • There was no past, no future, no words, nothing - just the light and the yellow and the scent of dry leaves in the sun. Japan's internationally celebrated storyteller returns with five stories of healing and hope.

      Dead End Memories
    • "First published in Japan in 2003 and never before published in the United States, Dead-End Memories collects the stories of five women who, following sudden and painful events, quietly discover their ways back to recovery. Among the women we meet in Dead-End Memories is one betrayed by her fiancé who finds a perfect refuge in an apartment above her uncle's bar while seeking the real meaning of happiness. In "House of Ghosts," the daughter of a yoshoku restaurant owner encounters the ghosts of a sweet elderly couple who haven't yet realized that they've been dead for years. In "Tomo-chan's Happiness," an office worker who is a victim of sexual assault finally catches sight of the hope of romance. Yoshimoto's gentle, effortless prose reminds us that one true miracle can be as simple as having someone to share a meal with, and that happiness is always within us if only we take a moment to pause and reflect. Discover this collection of what Yoshimoto herself calls the "most precious work of my writing career.""-- Provided by publisher

      Dead-End Memories
    • Asleep

      • 184pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,9(9157)Évaluer

      Banana Yoshimoto has a magical ability to animate the lives of her young characters, and here she spins the stories of three women, all bewitched into a spiritual sleep. One, mourning a lost lover, finds herself sleepwalking at night. Another, who has embarked on a relationship with a man whose wife is in a coma, finds herself suddenly unable to stay awake. A third finds her sleep haunted by another woman whom she was once pitted against in a love triangle. Sly and mystical as a ghost story, with a touch of Kafkaesque surrealism, Asleep is an enchanting book from one of the best writers in contemporary international fiction.

      Asleep
    • Goodbye Tsugumi

      • 186pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,8(9863)Évaluer

      Having grown up by the sea with her invalid cousin Tsugumi, Maria moves to Tokyo and encounters university life and impending adulthood, and spending a last summer with her cousin, she comes to a new understanding about home and family.

      Goodbye Tsugumi
    • In these six stories Yoshimoto masterfully explores themes of time, healing and fate, and how her urban, sophisticated, independent young men and women come to terms with them. Her characters find themselves caught in emotional webs that they often fail to understand, but they discover themselves and reinvent themselves through the power of the stories they tell.

      Lizard
    • Hardboiled & Hard Luck

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      3,8(4943)Évaluer

      Presents two novellas, one about a young woman's dream about an ex-lover while on a hiking trip, and the other about the sister of a woman lying in a coma.

      Hardboiled & Hard Luck
    • Amrita

      • 356pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,7(5717)Évaluer

      A celebrated actress who has died in mysterious and shocking circumstances leaves behind an unconventional extended family that includes an older sister, a woman in her twenties through whose eyes the story unfolds; a young brother who possesses mystical powers; and a fiancé who is writing a novel with uncanny parallels to his own story.'Her novels can have the effect of addictive drugs . . . Pathos, nostalgia, the sense of exquisite sadness at the fleetingness of life are key elements of beauty in Japanese aesthetics, and all are themes central to Yoshimoto's books.' The Times

      Amrita
    • Moshi Moshi

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,7(504)Évaluer

      "A beautiful translation . . . Yoshimoto deploys a magically Japanese light touch to emotionally and existentially tough subject matter: domestic disarray, loneliness, identity issues, lovesickness . . . [a] nimble narrative." ―ELLE In Moshi Moshi, Yoshie’s much–loved musician father has died in a suicide pact with an unknown woman. It is only when Yoshie and her mother move to Shimokitazawa, a traditional Tokyo neighborhood of narrow streets, quirky shops, and friendly residents that they can finally start to put their painful past behind them. However, despite their attempts to move forward, Yoshie is haunted by nightmares in which her father is looking for the phone he left behind on the day he died, or on which she is trying—unsuccessfully—to call him. Is her dead father trying to communicate a message to her through these dreams? With the lightness of touch and surreal detachment that are the hallmarks of her writing, Banana Yoshimoto turns a potential tragedy into a poignant coming–of–age ghost story and a life–affirming homage to the healing powers of community, food, and family.

      Moshi Moshi
    • The Lake

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,6(308)Évaluer

      The Lake showcases Banana Yoshimoto's signature vivid characters and nuanced prose while delving into darker themes. It follows a young woman in Tokyo who, after her mother's death, develops a romance with a man haunted by childhood trauma linked to a bizarre cult. Their journey leads to hope and healing by a serene lake.

      The Lake