Shipwrecks
By (Author) Akira Yoshimura
Introduction by David Mitchell
Translated by Mark Ealey
Canongate Books
Canongate Canons
22nd November 2017
2nd November 2017
Main - Canons edition
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Fiction in translation
895.635
Paperback
176
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 9mm
134g
Introduced by David Mitchell
In a coastal village in medieval Japan, a young boy called Isaku battles to keep his family alive against the odds. With his father gone, Isaku is forced to grow up well before his time. He must learn how to catch fish, how to distil salt, and about all the mysteries of the vast churning sea, not least the legend of O-fune-sama, of ships wrecked offshore providing the village with unexpected bounty.
When a ship founders on the rocks, Isaku and the villagers rejoice. Long have they prayed for the sea's gifts. But the cargo is not at all the blessing they hoped for. At first mystifying, then terrifying, something dark is coming ashore and it's about to change their lives forever.
Exquisitely paced * * Sunday Times * *
Haunting * * Guardian * *
A haunting and beautifully rendered tale of enduring optimism * * Herald * *
Has all the turbulent power of the sea * * Scotsman * *
Set against [a] tapestry of near-nihilistic misery, Yoshimura's chiaroscuro touches of hope and love hint at something more profound * * Times Literary Supplement * *
Akira Yoshimura was born in 1927. He was the prize-winning, bestselling author of twenty novels and collections of short stories and was the president of Japan's writer's union and a member of International PEN. He died in 2006.