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Introduced by David Mitchell In a coastal village in medieval
Japan, a young boy called Isaku battles to keep his family alive
against the odds. With his father gone, Isaku is forced to grow up
well before his time. He must learn how to catch fish, how to
distil salt, and about all the mysteries of the vast churning sea,
not least the legend of O-fune-sama, of ships wrecked offshore
providing the village with unexpected bounty. When a ship founders
on the rocks, Isaku and the villagers rejoice. Long have they
prayed for the sea's gifts. But the cargo is not at all the
blessing they had hoped for. At first mystifying, then terrifying,
something dark is coming ashore and it's about to change their
lives forever.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki have been destroyed. Japan is in ruins and
occupied by the Americans. Takuya, an ex-officer in the Imperial
Army, has returned to his native village only to learn that the
Occupation authorities are intensifying their efforts to apprehend
suspected war criminals. And those who are found guilty are being
sentenced to death. Fearing that his role in the execution of a
number of American pilots, Takuya takes to the road and becomes a
fugitive in his own country. One Man's Justice is both a reflection
on the murky reality of war and a page-turning novel of pursuit and
escape.
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Shipwrecks (Paperback)
Akira Yoshimura
bundle available
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R345
R311
Discovery Miles 3 110
Save R34 (10%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Isaku is a nine-year-old boy living in a remote, desperately poor
fishing village on the coast of Japan. His people catch barely
enough fish to live on, and so must distill salt to sell to
neighboring villages. But this industry serves another, more
sinister purpose: the fires of the salt cauldrons lure passing
ships toward the shore and onto rocky shoals. When a ship runs
aground, the villagers slaughter the crew and loot the cargo for
rice, wine, and rich delicacies. One day a ship founders on the
rocks. But Isaku learns that its cargo is far deadlier than could
ever be imagined. Shipwrecks, the first novel by the great Japanese
writer Yoshimura to be translated into English, is a stunningly
powerful, Gothic tale of fate and retribution.
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Storm Rider (Paperback)
Akira Yoshimura
bundle available
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R702
R639
Discovery Miles 6 390
Save R63 (9%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Based on real characters and events, Storm Rider is a vivid
historical portrait of Japan and America in the mid-nineteenth
century, as well as an exciting high-seas adventure and a moving
story of a man lost between two cultures.
At the age of thirteen, Hikotaro is orphaned and left to a life at
sea. When the merchant vessel he sails on is caught in a violent
storm on the Pacific, an American ship comes to the rescue and
takes the young boy to San Francisco. With trepidation and hope,
the boy-now dubbed Hikozo-accepts his new country. Still, he dreams
of returning to Japan, but shogunate policy forbids reentry to
Japanese who have been abroad. He tries anyway, only to be refused
and returned to America, where a wealthy American adopts Hikozo and
introduces him to a world of influence and power. Some ten years
later, Hikozo returns to a Japan stirred into violence by the
opening of the country. At the same time, America is in the midst
of its bloody Civil War, and Hikozo finds that there is no place he
can call home.
After spending sixteen years in prison for a crime of the heart,
Shiro Kikutani is released into a world he no longer recognizes. He
must readjust to the bright and vigorous stimulus of Tokyo while
fending off his own dark memories. In a spare yet powerful style,
Akira Yoshimura paints the psychology of a quiet man navigating his
way through the unsuspected traumas of freedom-finding a job,
finding a home, even something as simple as buying an alarm clock.
Kikutani takes comfort in the numbing repetition of his new daily
life, only to be drawn inexorably back to the scene of his crime. A
subtly powerful story, On Parole explores the fragile life of a
murderer and the conditions of freedom in an unforgiving society.
Yoshimura's startling novel raises provocative questions of guilt
and redemption.
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