Days at the Morisaki Bookshop: A Love Letter to Books, Tokyo, and Second Chances

Days at the Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa

Days at the Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa is a quiet, tender novel about finding your way when life has left you adrift. Takako, a young woman from Tokyo, quits her office job and comes to live and work in the small second-hand bookstore of her uncle, Satoru, in a small provincial town.

In her life in Tokyo, she was indecisive, reserved, and treated like dirt by her boyfriend. After summoning the courage to confront her boyfriend and tell him the truth, Takako takes a decisive step forward, leaving behind the negativity and moving on with her life.

Her uncle’s wife suddenly reappears with her husband after years of absence. As if nothing had happened. With her aunt Momoko, she heads into the mountains for a weekend. Momoko turns out to have had an abortion years ago and then struggled with life. After the mountain outing, Momolo disappears again as shyly as she has returned. Takako breaks her vow of secrecy and informs her uncle Satoru of the secret his wife is carrying. He searches and finds his wife again, and they become closer than ever.

Secretive as a Murakami. With a fine list of quoted Japanese writers at the back of the book.

If you’ve ever lost yourself in The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin—a novel about a grumpy bookshop owner who rediscovers joy through books—then Days at the Morisaki Bookshop will feel like a kindred spirit. Both books describe bookshops not as places to buy books; they’re places where lives are rebuilt.

A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh, not boring at all!

Evelyn Waugh

I had not read Waugh before, thinking he would be rather boring. I found this book, A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh, in the estate of my father, who had better taste. So, I almost had to miss this beauty.

A young upper-class English family with one child leads a tame life. Pampered by butlers, gardeners and other household staff, the days drag by. One hits the booze early and uses lunches and dinners out of doors at clubs where you must be seen.

When his wife Brenda cheats, wanting to divorce him and pick him bald, Tony only seems to wake up. He refuses further cooperation with the divorce and leaves on a voyage of discovery to Central America.

In London, dinner is served at 2100 hours. Tony is in the middle of the Brazilian jungle. At first, he drinks chocolate milk before bed, but slowly, a catastrophe unfolds. The local guides abandon him and Dr. Messinger, his companion on the trip.

Brenda’s affair does not end well either.

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Tony falls ill and hallucinates a stream of trivialities from his former sedate life. While hallucinating, he reaches the city, the trek’s goal through the jungle. But even the city turns out to be a hallucination. He is picked up by a white man left behind in the jungle. This man takes him hostage and wants Tony to keep reading to him forever from the books of Dickens that he cannot read.

In England, Tony’s cousin has inherited his big house Hetton and continues Tony’s sedate life.

Fragile Things by Neil Gaiman

Just finished Neil Gaiman’s Fragile Things, a collection of short stories.

Love it. Love the free floating supernatural and weirdness of the stories.

The stories are diverse.

A Sherlock Holmes story very much in the style of Arthur Conan Doyle.

Stories about Death, Dead People not really dead, or transitioning to death, a sort of zombies, but not zombies as flat as in the B-level horror movies.

Some fantastic poems like fairy tales.

A story about people striving to have eaten every animal on the planet, finding their match in the Sunbird – the Phoenix.

A marvelous story about Shadow, the hero from American Gods, fighting gods in Scotland this time.

Great stuff.

American Gods – Neil Gaiman

I love books that read like the writer does not know yet where the story will end yet.

This quality I love in Joseph Heller’s Catch-22, almost all the work of Haruki Murakami, and also Neil Gaiman’s American Gods.

American Gods reached a sort of cult status that I was unaware of when I bought a cheap pocket edition (9,90 euro). A television series was made based on the novel.

Read in two straight sittings. Incredibly good. At the level of Norwegian Wood, Voyage au bout de la Nuit, One Hundred Years of Solitude.