Reviews and Comments

dwhatson

dwhatson@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 weeks, 1 day ago

I read across a wide range of genres in both fiction and non-fiction. Reading is the best antidote, I can find, for my ignorance. I have a degree in Library and Information Services and spent too much time working in bookshops. I'd love to stay and chat, but I've got books to read.

This link opens in a pop-up window

村田沙耶香: Convenience Store Woman (2018, Granta) 4 stars

Keiko Furukura had always been considered a strange child, and her parents always worried how …

Making The Mundane Interesting

No rating

This is one of the most delightful and quirky books I've read in some time. The protagonist of the novel, Keiko, is neurodivergent, 36 years old, has never had a physical relationship with anyone, has been working at the same convenience store since she was 18 and has a sister who hopes that one day Keiko will be 'cured'. Her relationship with the convenience store is everything. It regulates her sleeping patterns, the food she eats and her personal appearance. It even provides her with a script on interacting with the customers.

However, working in a convenience store is not seen as a real job and besides, at her age, Keiko should be considering marriage and children. These things mean nothing to Keiko. Instead, she spends her days copying mannerisms, expressions and dress styles from her coworkers to build a repertoire of social normality so that her circle of friends …

村田沙耶香: Convenience Store Woman (2018, Granta) 4 stars

Keiko Furukura had always been considered a strange child, and her parents always worried how …

I read this book as a humorous commentary, if not satire, regarding Japanese working culture. On another level, it serves as a general critique of Japanese society and those, particularly women, through no fault of their own are doomed never to fit in.

Masha Gessen: The future is history (2017, Riverhead Books) 4 stars

More Than Just A Modern History Lesson

4 stars

Through the lives of four of its citizens, Masha Gessen shows the reader the political morphing of modern Russia. The book begins with the fall of the Soviet Bloc, meanders through the country’s brief flirtation with a more liberal political system before finally falling into step with the totalitarian methods of its current leaders. This is more than a modern history lesson. Gessen makes good use of her characters allowing the reader to see how universalities such as personal relationships, employment, accommodation, personal liberties, and the availability of common commodities are affected as the structure of government changes. Through the lives of her four central characters, their families, friends, and associates, Gessen also examines the Russian psyche during the post-Soviet era, the use of disinformation and propaganda, corruption, and the legal system. This is not a book that I wished to finish quickly. I found greater satisfaction in reading a …