Kin
The spellbinding new novel from the Women's Prize-winning author of An American Marriage
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- 予約注文
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- リリース予定日:2026年2月24日
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- ¥1,800
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- 予約注文
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- ¥1,800
発行者による作品情報
'Smart and funny and deftly profound. This is Tayari Jones's very best work.' Ann Patchett, author of Tom Lake
Vernice and Annie are ‘cradle friends’, both born in Honeysuckle, Louisiana, both destined never to know their mothers. The girls are inseparable, bound by a friendship far deeper than sisterhood, but as they grow up, their lives start to look very different in the segregated America of the 1950s and 60s.
Both girls leave Honeysuckle in search of something that might fill the hole left by their absent mothers: a university education, the promise of a first love affair, the hope offered by the simmering civil rights movement. But it is Annie whose bad decisions pull her into a world of danger, leaving her oldest friend to battle to save her.
Tayari Jones returns with an exuberant, richly told novel about mothers and daughters, about a lifelong friendship, and the complexities of being a woman in the American South.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Jones (An American Marriage) delivers a triumphant novel of two motherless girls from rural Honeysuckle, La., who follow very different paths into adulthood. Vernice "Niecy" Davis is orphaned as an infant and raised reluctantly by her free-spirited aunt Irene, who dispenses such advice as "If you ever get a chance in life, grab you a preacher, but just temporarily. Don't fool around and end up being somebody's first lady." Before Niecy learns to talk, she befriends Annie Johnson, who's being raised by her grandmother after her "trifling" mother, Hattie Lee, left her at one month old. In Annie and Niecy's alternating narration, the women reflect on their abandonment—Niecy's in a permanent sense, as her father killed her mother and himself, while Annie always hopes that someday Hattie Lee will return and grow to love her. After high school, Niecy leaves for Spelman College in Atlanta, where her wealthy roommate, Joette, nicknames her "country mouse" and chastises her for spending so much time thinking about her "other girlfriend," Annie, who's been writing to Niecy about her torrid misadventures on the way to Memphis in search of Hattie Lee with her ex-boyfriend's cousin Bobo. Annie's and Niecy's paths continue to diverge, first when Niecy entertains a suitor at Spelman and later when Annie gets unexpectedly pregnant. Still, they remain the most important person to the other even as it feels like they're on "different sides of a waterfall," as Annie puts it in a letter. Throughout, Jones tells her protagonists' stories with grace, humor, and pathos. It's a tour de force.