The best recent translated fiction โ review roundup
Sisters in Yellow by Mieko Kawakami; All Flesh by Ananda Devi; The White Desert by Luis Lรณpez Carrasco; The Home of the Drowned by Elin Anna Labba Sisters in Yellow by Mieko Kawakami, translated by Laurel Taylor and Hitomi Yoshio (Picador, ยฃ16.99) Kawakamiโs latest opens with a bang, as narrator Hana learns that her old friend Kimiko has been charged with abduction. This MacGuffin takes us to their friendship in late-1990s Tokyo, when teen Hana and the older woman open a bar called Lemon: โYellow attracts money.โ But itโs a turbulent ride and soon Hana is in a world of organised crime. โThe world is crazy. I feel like Iโm living in a manga.โ Sheโs not the only one, and you need an appetite for Kawakamiโs style, which prefers to explore rather than explain โ people come and go, buildings burn down, cancer is diagnosed, almost at random โ but the relentless rush means thereโs no time to get bored. At its best โ as in a scene where Hanaโs unreliable mother wants to borrow 2m yen for investment in lingerie that helps โyour spine and organs move back to where theyโre supposed to beโ โ this is a story both absurd and horrifying. All Flesh by Ananda Devi, translated by Jeffrey Zuckerman (Pushkin, ยฃ12.99) โForgive me for starting this story with bodily, unpalatable origins.โ You may as well โ itโs all like that. In an unnamed European country, a schoolgirl โborn with no urge but to consumeโ is getting bigger and bigger. โMy gut, my ass, my thighs โ they were all set on reaching the farthest corners of the world.โ She blames her gluttony on the need to silence the voice of her dead twin sister, who was โabsorbed into my tissuesโ in the womb. She hates school, where other kids mock her, as though her own self-disgust werenโt enough. After a blackly comic scene where she gets stuck in her bedroom doorframe like โan uncooperative corkโ, she falls in love with the lonely carpenter who arrives to widen the door โ but there are more twists to come. This powerful story is deeply physical, but driven by a compelling voice describing the torment of a girl who is โthe psychical mirror of our time โฆ immoderation made manifestโ. Continue reading...