
Published
by Leapfrog Press, USA
Copyright
2007 by Suzanne Kamata
Paper, 195 pages, 153x229, ISBN 978-0-9728984-9-2
US$14.95, Yen 2,240
IMC welcomes orders from
booksellers, libraries, and bulk orders. If we cannot serve your
location, we will refer you to a local distributor or stockist. Online
see http://jpgsonline.com and http://imcbook.net. IMC has been
providing English publication services from Tokyo since 1959:
Intercontinental Marketing Corp, Centre Bldg 2F, 1-14-13 Iriya, Taitoku
Tokyo 110-0013,
Tel 03-3876-3073, Fax 03-3876-3627, email: kunikoi[at]attglobal.net.
Please visit the office if you have time.Open 10am - 4pm, Mon-Fri, and
by appointment on weekends.
Use the form here to order.
|
A young mother fights impossible odds
to be reunited with her child in this acutely insightful first novel
about an intercultural marriage gone terribly wrong.
Jill Parker is an American painter living in Japan. Far from the trendy gaijin
neighborhoods of uptown Tokyo, she's settled in a remote seaside
village where she makes ends meet as a bar hostess. Her world appears
to open when she meets Yusuke, a savvy and sensitive art gallery owner
who believes in her talent. But their love affair, and subsequent
marriage, is doomed to a life of domestic hell, for Yusuke is the chonan,
the eldest son, who assumes the role of rigid patriarch in his
traditional family while Jill's duty is that of a servile Japanese
wife. A daily battle of wills ensues as Jill resists instruction in the
proper womanly arts. Even the long-anticipated birth of a son, Kei,
fails to unite them. Divorce is the only way out, but in Japan a
foreigner has no rights to custody, and Jill must choose between
freedom and abandoning her child.
Told with tenderness, humor, and an insider's knowledge of contemporary Japan, Losing Kei is the debut novel of an exceptional expatriate voice.
Suzanne Kamata's work has appeared in over one hundred publications. She is the editor of The Broken Bridge: Fiction from Expatriates in Literary Japan
and a forthcoming anthology from Beacon Press on parenting children
with disabilities. A five-time nominee for the Pushcart Prize, she has
twice won the Nippon Airways/Wingspan Fiction Contest.
|