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The Book of Form and Emptiness: Winner of the Womens Prize for Fiction 2022

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Book of Form and Emptiness: Winner of the Womens Prize for Fiction 2022

Contributors:

By (Author) Ruth Ozeki

ISBN:

9781922458193

Publisher:

Text Publishing

Imprint:

The Text Publishing Company

Publication Date:

28th September 2021

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Other Subjects:

Narrative theme: Interior life

Prizes:

Winner of Womens Prize for Fiction 2022 (UK)

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

512

Dimensions:

Width 153mm, Height 234mm

Description

After his father dies, Benny Oh finds he can hear objects talking: teapots, marbles and sharpened pencils, babbling in anger or distress. His mother, struggling to support their household alone, starts collecting things to give her comfort. Overwhelmed by the clamour of all the stuff, Benny seeks refuge in the beautiful silence of the public library.

There, the objects speak only in whispers. There, he meets a homeless poet and a mesmerising young performance artist. There, a book reaches out to him. Not just any book: his own book. And a very important conversation begins.

The Book of Form and Emptiness is about grief, resilience, creativity and psychological difference. It is about the importance of reading, and an observation of the mess consumer culture has got us into. It is an affirmation of the power of community. It is funny, kind, wise, urgent and completely irresistible. If you let itif you listenit could change your life.

Reviews

This compassionate novel of life, love and loss glows in the dark. Its strange, beautiful pages turn themselves. If youve lost your way with fiction over the last year or two, let The Book of Form and Emptiness light your way home.

* David Mitchell *
'In The Book of Form and Emptiness Ruth Ozeki writes "A book must end somewhere." But this magnificent novel is a book that will never end; it will live within you as long as there is hope and words and a need for communion. This is Ruth Ozeki at her playful incandescent brilliant besta reality-expanding masterpiece.' * Junot Diaz *

'Ingenious and touching, A Tale for the Time Being is also highly readable. And interesting: the contrast of cultures is especially well done. I greatly look forward to Ruth Ozekis next book.'

* Philip Pullman *

Heart-breaking and heart-healing -- a book to not only keep us absorbed but also to help us think and love and live and listen. No one writes quite like Ruth Ozeki and The Book of Form and Emptiness is a triumph.

* Matt Haig *
This is both an extremely vivid picture of a small family enduring unimaginable loss, and a very powerful meditation on the way books can contain the chaos of the world and give it meaning and order. Annabelle and Benny Oh try to stay afloat in a sea of things, news, substances, technological soullessness, and psychiatric quagmires, and the way they learn to live and breathe and even swim through it all feels like the struggle we all face. The Book of Form and Emptiness builds on the themes of A Tale for the Time Being, and ratifies Ozeki as one of our eras most compassionate and original minds. * Dave Eggers *
'Ruth Ozeki is an animatorShe endows objects and animals with anima, the breath of life. Adept at magical realist fiction, Ozeki ensouls the worldTheres powerful magic here. * New York Times *
[An] ambitious and ingenious novel that presents a stinging exploration of grief, a reflection on our relationship to objects, a potent testament to the importance of reading, writing, and booksIts heart, its ardent, beating heart, is huge. Ozekis playfulness and zaniness, her compassion and boundless curiosity, prevent the novel from ever feeling stiff or pretentious. Clever without being arch, metafictional without being arcane, dark without being nihilistic, The Book of Form and Emptiness is an exuberant delight. * Boston Globe *
'A stunning return from Booker Prize-shortlisted Ruth Ozeki further cements her status as one of modern literatures most original storytellers. Engulfed by the noise of household objects (yes, they can talk) in the wake of his fathers death, Benny Oh seeks refuge in the library, where he encounters intriguing new characters, both in the human and object world. An entrancing, contemplative story about the power of listening and compassion. * Happy Mag *
'The Book of Form and Emptiness is a strange and compelling novel about loss, creativity, difference, and the power of the written word...Ozekis latest is a challenging, rewarding and unexpected work that is bound to crop up on many best of lists at the end of the year. * Readings Monthly *
The Book of Form and Emptiness is a big, polyphonic, often comic, magical-realist collageA compelling story of human connection and the redemptive power of art. * Observer *
Wild, in a great wayOnce it gets to then end, Im totally in, Im onboard, ten out on ten. * John Safran, RN Bookshelf *
A magical bookI would recommend. * RNZ Nine to Noon *
Storytelling rarely comes more capacious than Ruth Ozekis latest novel...Ozeki interconnects zen philosophy, the environmental crisis, a critique of our mass consumer lifestyle and a playful post-modern sensibilityone of the characters is a talking bookwithin a novel that, for all its wide-ranging intellectual restlessness, remains grounded in its characters emotional reality. * Mail on Sunday *
[Its hard] not to like Ozekis calm, dry, methodical good humour and wit, her love affairs with linguistics and jazz and the absurd, her cautious optimism, her gentle parodies...What she is best at conveying, though, is the tidal flood of human life and the absurd...she makes something so satisfying that it gave me the sense of being addressed not by an author but by a world, one that doesnt quite exist yet, except in tenuous parallel to ours: a world built out of ideas that spill into the text like a continuous real-time event. * Guardian *
Theres powerful magic here...Ozeki is unusually patient with her characters, even the rebarbative ones, and she is able to record the subtle peculiarities of other classes of beings that more overeager writers would probably miss...Ozeki gives us a metaphor for our very own American consumption disorder, our love-hate relationship with the stuff we produce and cant let go of. * New York Times Book Review *
A masterful meditation on consumer culture...This novels meditative pacing perfectly suits its open-hearted contemplation...The Book of Form and Emptiness is concerned foremost with the outsiders in our world, the ones who hear voices, who are friendless, who fall into addiction and self-harm. Its concerned, too, with the ultimate outsiders, the objects that we produce and discard, produce and discard. It is both profound and fun, a loving indictment of our consumer culture. As the novel asks the reader turning the pages, has it ever occurred to you that books have feelings, too * USA Today *
[A] tale of sorrow, danger and tentative redemption serves as the springboard for extended meditations on the interdependence of all beings, the magic of books, the disastrous ecological and spiritual effects of unchecked consumerism and moreOne of Ozekis gifts as a novelist is the ability to enfold provocative intellectual material within a human story grounded in sharply observed social detail...The Book itself has a marvellous voice: adult, ironic, affirming at every turn the importance of books as a repository of humanitys deepest wisdom and highest aspirations. * Washington Post *
Ozeki has shifted her readers way of perceiving what is normal through a sort of slow, capillary action. Her books are not didactic, but they are useful; theyre not mission-driven, but they are richly moral. She writes urgently about the environmentyou leave an Ozeki book knowing more about ocean contamination or factory farmingand her novels tend to include a painful parent-child rupture as well as a burbling stream of absurdist humor...Ozeki started writing The Book of Form and Emptiness eight years ago, but it is eerily suited to what readers are going through now, a quantum companion to A Tale for the Time Being: If time is part of healing, sorting through matterthrough stuffis part of mourning. * New York Magazine *
Heartfelt...Ozeki, a practicing Buddhist priest, infuses her story with Zen philosophy, using themes of mindfulness and our connection to the living world to highlight pressing modern concerns like climate change, capitalism and the function of art. Inventive, vivid and propelled by a sense of wonder, The Book of Form and Emptiness will delight younger and older readers alike. * TIME *
'I like a novel to grab me and The Book of Form and Emptiness by Ruth Ozeki gave me very peculiar dreams for a long time, as though it did not want to release me to other things. * Cathy Rentzenbrink, Guardian best books of 2021 *
A wry, metafictional take on grief, attachment and growing up. * Guardian, best fiction of 2021 *
'The Book of Form and Emptiness is philosophical, metafictive, surreal and real. On one hand it is a paean to books but it is more a wise, unwieldy and warm celebration of people as they seek their place in the world and find their voice. It is a maverick love story. * Joy Lawn, Paperbark Words *
[The Book of Form and Emptiness] is funny, kind, wise, urgent and completely irresistible. * Page and Blackmore NZ *
Philosophically serious and formally playfulBoth deeply affecting and uplifting. * Guardian *
Stunning story of grief, creativity and resiliencepushing the boundaries of what a novel can do. Australian

Author Bio

Ruth Ozeki was born and raised in Connecticut by an American father and a Japanese mother. She is a novelist, filmmaker and Zen Buddhist priest whose books have garnered international acclaim. Her first two novels, My Year of Meats (1998) and All Over Creation (2003), have been translated into eleven languages and published in fourteen countries. Her third novel, A Tale for the Time Being (2013), won the LA Times Book Prize, was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award, and has been published in over thirty countries.

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