Available Formats
Spring Garden
By (Author) Tomoka Shibasaki
Translated by Polly Barton
Pushkin Press
Pushkin Press
26th January 2017
26th January 2017
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
895.636
Paperback
160
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
Strange, gripping, startling and unusual: the best of contemporary Japanese literature.
Taro is divorced, unhappy in his job, and living in a half-empty building that is about to be torn down. One summer morning, he sees a fellow resident climbing over the wall to the next-door house. She says she is called Nishi, and invites herself inside. It emerges that Nishi's fascination with this pale blue house began in her student days twenty years before, and came from a book of photos called Spring Garden from decades earlier. As the summer draws to a close, Nishi, Taro and the new family that has moved into the old house come together and drift apart, leaving the reader with a sense of their whole life in just a few vivid snapshots.
A delicate, intimate novella The Lady Spring Garden is a brief, compassionate tale about loss, friendship and architecture, and the many ways we can live our lives The Japan Society Shibasaki expertly weaves a sense of foreboding Asymptote
Tomoka Shibasaki was born in 1973 in Osaka and began writing fiction while still in high school. After graduating from university, she took an office job but continued writing, and was shortlisted for the Bungei Prize in 1998. Her first book, A Day on the Planet, was turned into a hit movie, and Spring Garden won the prestigious Akutagawa Prize in 2014.