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Lädt ... Lange habe ich nicht vom Fliegen geträumt: Romanvon Taichi Yamada
Keine Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. Hummm... Que dizer deste livro. Este foi um daqueles que quis reler porque honestamente já não tinha a história bem presente, mas tendo ficado com a ideia de que Yamada apresentava uma escrita fluente, realista que na altura me cativou. Não sou conhecedor de Taichi Yamada, mas fiquei impressionado com a maneira como ele nos descreve o dia a dia deste homem que se vê envolvido numa história completamente surreal, numa espécie de "O Estranho Caso de Benjamin Buttler" à japonesa, se me é permitida a liberdade de comparação. Neste livro, Taura, um homem de meia idade, conhece, em condições muito peculiares, uma mulher chamada Mutsuko. Eles acabam por desenvolver uma história de amor e luxúria, com a particularidade de que Mutsuko - por razões que nos são totalmente desconhecidas e inexplicáveis, até pelas próprias personagens - começa a viver uma vida em regressão: a cada encontro ela vai ficando cada vez mais nova... Uma escrita despretensiosa, coloquial, somos confrontados com a existência de um Taura só vivendo sobre o peso de uma existência até então vazia e que encontra em Mutsuko um desejo que até então lhe era desconhecido. Like his previous work Strangers, Yamada weaves a tale of marital unhappiness, work-related stress and middle-aged mental trauma. Into the mix, as usual, comes the vaguely supernatural chance meeting. Yamada has the ability to infuse the everyday with the unnatural, making the mundane somehow fascinating without altering its basic structure. The people in his stories are just like us, going through the motions of lives they don't appreciate and don't think much about, until the supernatural walks up and drags them out of their comfort zone. Less outright horrifying than creepy and unsettling, these books are always good for giving the reader a heavy heart and a lot to think about. I Haven't Dreamed of Flying goes more for the "unclassifiable creepy occurance" than for a ghost tale this time around. Taura, the main character, spends time in a hospital recovering from an injury he inflicted upon himself during a stress-related psychotic break. While there, he engages in some "dirty talk" with a young-sounding woman who is also injured and hidden behind a partition. Only afterwards does he find out she is an old woman. Disgusted, he tries to put it out of mind and goes on with his life. The next time he sees her, though, she appears a bit younger... Zeige 4 von 4 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
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Following his acclaimed novels Strangers and In Search of a Distant Voice, I Haven't Dreamed of Flying for a While is another haunting, urban ghost story from Taichi Yamada. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)895.635Literature Literature of other languages Asian (east and south east) languages Japanese Japanese fiction 1945–2000Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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In this beautiful tale, we have Taura, a 48 year old deputy director in a company that builds pre-fab houses and Mutsuko, a 67 year old grandmother. Both appear to be cast adrift from their own lives. They meet in a hospital & after a series of awkward moments they have a spoken sexual encounter whilst separated by a screen. The next morning a nurse moves the screen and Taura sees this wizened grey old lady.
After leaving the hospital, Taura again encounters Mutsuko, she is now physically younger by about 20 years, they then, consumed by passion, embark upon an affair. A sense of dread slowly pervades this relationship as Mutsuko each time they meet is physically younger, although remaining a 67 year old grandmother. As I'm reading this. I start to worry that we are heading into Nabokov territory, as Mutsuko appears as a beautiful teenager.
"I pulled a blanket over her naked shoulder & felt like a father fixing the blanket of his child - even though only a moment before, had been inside her"
Taura, as well as myself, are left wondering what will happen, "will she next be a child & after that?"
This novel by Taichi Yamada is the 2nd book I've read by him and as with the first, (Strangers), there is an interstitial tear between the characters and the real world they would normally inhabit. This device, this heightened magic realism, drives the story forward relying on the conflict between reality and unreality, allowing us to focus on Taura and Mutsuko's tale.
It treads the borderline between the supernatural & reality, never really answering your questions such as, why is this happening to Mutsuko, is it caused by Taura or their relationship & what will happen?
Like Taura, we watch it slip away never really understanding, though still haunted.
http://parrishlantern.blogspot.co.uk/2010/05/i-havent-dreamed-of-flying-for-whil... ( )