Parade
A Folktale
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- 8,99 €
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- 8,99 €
Publisher Description
"A parable about memory, mythic characters, and confessional regrets . . . An ethereal, resonating literary gift" (Booklist, starred review) from the internationally bestselling author of Strange Weather in Tokyo.
"On a summer afternoon, Tsukiko and her former high school teacher have prepared and eaten somen noodles together.
“Tell me a story from long ago,” Sensei says.
“I wasn’t alive long ago,” Tsukiko says, “but should I tell you a story from when I was little?”
“Please do,” Sensei replies, and so Tsukiko tells him that, when she was a child, she awakened one day to find something with a pale red face and something with a dark red face in her room, arguing with each other. They had human bodies, long noses, and wings. They were tengu, creatures that appear in Japanese folktales.
The tengu attach themselves to Tsukiko and begin to follow her everywhere. Where did they come from and why are they here? And what other invisible and unacknowledged forces are acting upon Tsukiko’s seemingly peaceful world?"
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A pair of mysterious creatures from Japanese folklore become a young girl's companions during a trying period in Kawakami's sweet and original tale (a companion piece to her novel Strange Weather in Tokyo). After a leisurely dinner of somen noodles with her old teacher, Sensei, Tsukiko relates the story of the creatures, called tengu, who began to follow her in childhood. "The tengu had human bodies... long noses, and wings. Their faces were beautiful shades of red, just as depicted in books." Tsukiko is shocked when the tengu first appear, but her friends and family see nothing amiss: her mother merely greets the tengu, and her third-grade classmates reveal that they've long had their own folktale companions, "a badger, a little old lady, and a rokurokubi woman with a very long neck." Used to and somewhat comforted by the tengu, who drink the nectar of flowers and communicate through "bristling sounds," Tsukiko is worried when one of them falls ill an illness that coincides with the mass shunning of her classmate, Yuko: "a cruel game, administered according to sheer whim." Part fairy tale, in which some readers will discern a moral, part gentle reminiscence of childhood's passing miracles and memorable pains, Kawakami's compact novel is gentle, charming and smart, as "pretty... and sad" as the sparkling touches of the tengu.