Die Ladenhüterin

Paperback, 160 pages

German language

Published March 9, 2018 by Aufbau.

ISBN:
978-3-7466-3606-1
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4 stars (39 reviews)

»Eine Liebesgeschichte aus den Tiefkühlregalen unserer Herzen.« rbb Die literarische Sensation aus Japan, die auch die deutschen Leserinnen und Leser im Sturm erobert hat: Eine Außenseiterin findet als Angestellte eines 24-Stunden-Supermarktes ihre wahre Bestimmung. Beeindruckend leicht und elegant entfaltet Sayaka Murata das Panorama einer Gesellschaft, deren Werte und Normen unverrückbar scheinen. Ein Roman, der weit über die Grenzen Japans hinausweist. »Schlicht und schön ist die Moral dieser befremdlich tröstlichen Geschichte.« Die Zeit » Die Ladenhüterin ist absurd, komisch, klug und präzise erzählt.« ZDF aspekte (Klappentext)

3 editions

This book got me into reading!

5 stars

It is a really unusual tale of a middle-aged part time worker completely satisfied with her life being confronted with different expectations of the people around her. This books highlights how people completely comfortable with their life get looked down upon by people viewing them as a 'failure'. I thought it gave a great reason to show how a good life not adhearing to the societal expectations can turn terrible by adhearing to them. It is partly cold partly funny and I loved every word from it.

However it might be a bit different from other books. Due to its' short length I still recommend this book to anyone interested in societal topics and simple living.

Review of 'Convenience Store Woman' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

"As far as I was concerned, though, keeping my mouth shut was the most sensible approach to getting by in life."

Keiko has always been different. Growing up she had problems understanding social norms, and her parents were concerned that she would always require an extra hand in life to get by. But soon after Keiko started going to university, she stumbled upon Smile Mart, a new convenience store opening up outside her train station. She was hired on, and spent the next 30-something odd years employed as a convenience store clerk. The same-ness of convenience store life appealed to Keiko, where there was an understandable pattern and flow to a workday. But everyone around her, from her parents to her friends to even her coworkers, felt that there was something wrong with her for not wanting something more for herself. Where was her permanent job? Her husband? Her kids? …

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Subjects

  • Man-woman relationships
  • Social life and customers
  • Clerks (Retail trade)
  • Fiction
  • Japan, fiction
  • Fiction, general
  • Man-woman relationships, fiction