Fear and Trembling

A Novel

Paperback, 144 pages

English language

Published Nov. 4, 2004 by St. Martin's Griffin.

ISBN:
978-0-312-34732-1
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
57922327

View on OpenLibrary

(3 reviews)

According to ancient Japanese protocol, foreigners deigning to approach the emperor were to adopt a tone of fear and trembling. Terror and self-abasement conveyed respect. Amelie, our well-intentioned and eager young Western heroine in this new novel by Amelie Nothomb, goes to Japan to spend a year working at the Yumimoto Corporation. Returning to the land where she was born is the fulfillment of a dream for Amelie; working there turns into a comic nightmare.".

"Poor Amelie can do nothing right. She starts at the bottom of the corporate ladder and immediately reveals a genius for working her way down. She delivers mail, serves tea, updates calendars, photocopies the same pages a thousand times; her job description, fluid at best, runs relentlessly downstream. But of Amelie's many failings and ill-advised breaches of protocol, the worst by far is becoming infatuated with her immediate superior, the beautiful, impeccable, and implacable Miss …

5 editions

"I suddenly wanted to tell her how delighted I was at being the instrument of her pleasure."

Amélie was excited to move to Japan to take an entry level position at a large corporation. However despite starting at the bottom, Amélie's repeated well intentioned and often hilarious blunders send her spiralling ever further down the ladder. Between cultural missteps in the Japanese corporate culture and small but impactful blunders in the even more mundane work assigned to her, she earns the rigorous fury of her manager, one of only three women in the entire company, who sees Amélie's honest mistakes as a deliberate attempt to undermine her.

On the face of it, this book might be about Amélie or a broader contrast to Japanese culture. But at it's centre is the manager, Fubuki, and how her life as an isolated career woman in Japan has shaped her and her world view. The tragedy is how much Amélie worships Fubuki. Despite how much Fubuki starts to hate Amélie, …

Review of 'Fear and Trembling' on 'Goodreads'

My first one star book ever; what can I say?

Easy to read, but as I progressed I found it more and more offensive. The comments about the honour of suicide for example. I found the author's attitude shocking. Was this the result of finding themselves subject to casual racism? I experienced racism in Japan, but it didn't inspire me to condemn the country the way the author does. I don't know if this has been translated into Japanese, I really hope it hasn't; not because of the cultural criticism but more for the venom with which it is delivered and the ridiculous conclusions drawn.

avatar for gntoni

rated it

Subjects

  • Fiction
  • Fiction - General
  • Mystery/Suspense
  • Literary
  • Media Tie-In - General
  • Fiction / Literary
  • Movie-TV Tie-In - General
  • Alien labor
  • Japan
  • Visitors, Foreign