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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
February 22, 2021 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781666546699
- File size: 190296 KB
- Duration: 06:36:26
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
August 3, 2020
Matsuda’s groundbreaking collection (after the novella The Girl Who Is Getting Married) turns traditional Japanese ghost and yōkai stories on their heads by championing wild, complex women. In “The Peony Lanterns,” recently unemployed Shinzaburō gets an eerie visit from two women, Tsuyoko and Yoneko, who try to sell him peony lanterns. Yoneko, the elder of the two, tells Shinzaburō of 30-something Tsuyoko’s tragic life: a motherless daughter with a cruel father, she was forced to leave home before completing high school. Shinzaburō refuses the lanterns, though he gains an epiphany from the women’s unusual sales tactics: “nothing terrible would happen if you broke the rules.” In “Quite a Catch,” a young woman named Shigemi carries on a sexual relationship with the ghost of a woman who was killed by the man she refused to marry. Not all of Matsuda’s stories captivate. “Team Sarashina” is about a group of women who are assigned to various departments in their company and offer their support to flailing coworkers, but it’s too obtuse to get a handle on. Most of Matsuda’s stories, though, hit their mark, particularly her queer, feminist fables, including “A Fox’s Life,” about a woman who passively internalizes sexism in her workplace (“I’m a girl. I’m just a girl, after all”) until she realizes in middle age that she might be a fox. Matsuda’s subversive revisionist tales are consistently exciting. -
AudioFile Magazine
Narrator Sarah Skaer's emotionally charged voice emboldens each story in this collection of traditional Japanese folktales retold from a feminist perspective. The new takes are darkly comedic and quirky. One story features a gossipy ghost who disapproves of hair removal, while in another a living woman is visited by a customer service representative from the afterlife. Skaer uses a wistful tone as a character recalls being unable to participate in the same activities as her classmates due to allergies. That tone audibly shifts as the character realizes her differences have created a keen sense of observation, which she views as a superpower. Skaer's dynamic narration is a double-edged sword that complements the stories' fantasy elements but exaggerates the awkwardness of some translated phrases. A.L.C. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine
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