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Ebook Free , by Ginny Tapley Takemori

Ebook Free , by Ginny Tapley Takemori

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, by Ginny Tapley Takemori

, by Ginny Tapley Takemori


, by Ginny Tapley Takemori


Ebook Free , by Ginny Tapley Takemori

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, by Ginny Tapley Takemori

Product details

File Size: 214 KB

Print Length: 176 pages

Publisher: Portobello Books (July 5, 2018)

Publication Date: July 5, 2018

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B07FCNMW2N

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Word Wise: Enabled

Lending: Not Enabled

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#52,026 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

A quick read, and I couldn't put it down. Keiko is very different from other humans, and she's aware of that and tries to fit in, not wishing to rock her family's boat. Her younger sister adores her and as they get older, gives her phrases to use in certain social situations. They protect Keiko by helping her fit in, but since the book is written in first person, and Keiko never mentions a diagnosis, we're left to wonder what exactly is her problem. Some readers have suggested she's a sociopath, and in the non-lethal sense, I lean that direction too. Keiko isn't malevolent, but there are a couple of scenes that carry great foreboding, and you see how she could be very dangerous.The author does a great job of not telling us what the truth is, but rather letting us walk around in Keiko's skin as she observes the other humans around her. From this we pick up hints that Keiko isn't passing for normal as much as she believes. When she gets a man in her life, the metaphoric aspects of the story deepen. For all her weirdness, and for all his toxic unsuitability, the people around her relax and accept her more. They celebrate that she is now part of a couple.The entire theme of the story, in my mind, and as some other commentors have said, is "what we have to do to meet societal expectations." A subtext of this theme is gender roles: what men and women are expected to do. As a flesh-and-blood human adult with the emotional capability of a 2-year-old, Keiko is nevertheless adept at mimicry. So she studies humans and copies their sentences, their voices, and their behaviors in order to fit in. Failure to do so will result in expulsion from the body, much like a bad meal. Over and over again, Keiko sees her existence as a cell within a body (her immediate social surroundings), and compliance means she gets to remain within the body. The metaphor is almost chilling, but the story while dark isn't unhappy. It even has a happy ending, a nice positive (if abrupt) character arc for Keiko.What I took away from CSW is that we need to be more accepting of those humans among us who aren't "normal." What I enjoyed the most about it was walking around inside the head of a sociopath. An intriguing, compelling short novel.

Convenience Store Woman is a slim, unsettling novel with a dark sense of humor that is largely one-note in its tone and premise: The novel represents the everyday life of Keiko Furukawa a single, middle-aged woman in one of Japan’s ubiquitous 24-hour convenience stores. She has been working as a basic employee for eighteen years, ever since graduating high school. Working at these stores has become the narrator’s reason for living, which seems to trouble almost everyone but herself.The novel does not have an elaborate plot and the drama and tension largely comes from the narrator’s observation of her own life and others as a convenience store employee. But for those who may be looking to read the book because of this conceit, the personality of the narrator may make or break how and whether or not you read the book. While I recommend the book, the book’s narrator main character Keiko Furukawa is depicted as a person who, to quote the character herself: "would no longer do anything of my own accord, and would either just mimic what everyone else was doing, or simply follow instructions."In both childhood flashbacks and repeated interjections throughout the novel it is repeatedly mentioned how “emotionless” Keiko feels she is and how she sees herself more as a vessel and a representation of the emotions and mores of her environment. Murata often makes it a point to frame Keiko's thoughts and behaviors in each scene to deliberately highlight how both emotionless and nonplussed Keiko can be toward life. Keiko's personality and the reader’s is tested when Keiko enters an unorthodox relationship with a toxic and verbally abusive man. This man is seen as a failure by family, former neighbors and coworkers. In his rage, he sees not just women but all people and the world itself as having personally wronged him. Her relentless tolerance of this poisonous individual and his abuse tests her patience and likely will for some readers as well.The novel’s sardonic humor and grim depiction of the constant pressure for women to get married and have children is a lasting one. I came to see the comedy from the drama of working as a cog in the 24/7 low-wage, high-turnover convenience store world as second to the determinedly emotionless way the narrator sees the world.At 163 pages in the compact hardcover, it is a quick read. I was able to finish the book in a single sitting. Ginny Tapley Takemori’s translation of Murata’s prose is unfussy and delivers the main character’s dry and often deadpan voice simply.

I picked up this book and read it straight through, despite whining children, inquisitive spouses, a million text messages, and who knows how much social media. And it’s New Year’s Eve!It’s always beneficial to end a year of reading on a cherry note. And Convenience Store Clerk definitely does that! It’s a funny and nuanced story of one Japanese girl’s search to find her place in society. As a child, she discovers that she is extremely - well- pragmatic when it comes to human relations. But her inclination to employ physical harm when necessary makes her family very concerned. So she hides her true nature away and stays quiet.After graduation, she finds her bliss. That this place ends up being a convenience store - she sees herself as an animal drawn to the store - bothers her not at all. But cut to 18 years later, and it’s clear that her life decisions have begun to bother everyone else in her circle of family and friends.The protagonist’s strategy to relieve her life of some external stressors winds up being extremely funny. She adopts a pet, so to speak, and gives it run of the bathtub; she also delivers its feed there. How this situation plays out in real life made me laugh like a loon and shake my head about Japanese expectations of social consensus, homogeneity, and efficiency. It’s like a zippy, 2 hour trip to Tokyo, without the jet lag!A fun book that also, if you give it a chance, will make you think a bit.

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