
Harvee from Book Bird Dog just posted this review of Real World by Natsuo Kirino.
Have you read this one too? Email me the link to your review, and I will add it to this post.
How would you react to a writer who names her books Grotesque and Out? I read the latter some time ago and found it so fascinating, I readily picked up Real World, (by Natsuo Kirino of Tokyo) when I found it on the New Releases shelf at the library.
Out portrayed the lives of a group of women harassed at work and/or at home in a male dominated society. They support each other through thick and thin in an "unholy" alliance of women. They get even, as I remember it, and cover for one another.
This new book, Real World, is about four teenage girls who suspect a local boy of committing a murder and are curious enough about him that they go out of their way to befriend him. Two are bored with their humdrum lives and want to be part of a new "adventure," so they befriend the boy, helping him in his escape. One gives him her bike and a new cell phone. Another takes the train to join him for a time while he runs from the authorities, paying for a cheap hotel where he can take a bath and get some sleep. A third is coerced into writing a "story or poem" of confession for him, which he wants to carry around in case he is ever caught by the police and has to answer to them. They all carry on conversations with the boy by cell phone.
The boy fantasizes that he is the Japanese soldier he saw in a film in grade school, a soldier being beaten and stabbed by an old Filipino woman and a man, evidently as a revenge for the Japanese occupation during WWII. This image seems to haunt him, and he sees his own demanding and nagging mother as the Filipino woman.
The four teenage girls who are curious about the boy and the 17 year old boy himself try to escape the reality of their lives, humdrum or horrific. They feel that what people see on the outside is different from what they are.
Real World is another noir novel by Kirino, this time about teens facing the consequences of the decisions they make.
***** Five stars for this novel!
For my third translation, I read The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho, translated from the Portuguese. Review here:
http://5-squared.blogspot.com/2009/03/alchemist-by-paulo-coelho.html
Posted by: Amanda | 03/25/2009 at 03:49 PM
For my second translation, I read The Death of Ivan Ilyich, and found it quite thought-provoking:
http://melissasbookreviews.blogspot.com/2009/03/death-of-ivan-ilyich.html
Posted by: Melissa (Book Nut) | 03/26/2009 at 03:26 PM
Hi! I also reviewed this book in my blog:
http://absorbedinwords.blogspot.com/2009/02/review-real-world.html
Posted by: Mark David | 06/06/2009 at 12:00 PM