{"id":4898,"date":"2020-02-04T08:29:36","date_gmt":"2020-02-04T02:59:36","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.thebooksatchel.com\/?p=4898"},"modified":"2020-04-09T10:35:29","modified_gmt":"2020-04-09T05:05:29","slug":"red-circle-minis2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.thebooksatchel.com\/red-circle-minis2\/","title":{"rendered":"Two New Japanese Short Stories from Red Circle Minis"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last year I reviewed three Red Circle Minis which are original Japanese short stories<\/a><\/span> and they introduced me to new authors. I felt these books were a great way to break free from the familiar Murakami-novel moulds to explore more fiction set in Japan. I was pleased to read yet another work of Kanji Hanawa and also be introduced to Takuji Ichikawa through these new books set in Japan.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Aimi and her family travel across a land as refugees. She hopes to be reunited to her love, Yusuke. Builders\u2014maybe saviours or rebels or ancient beings or gods\u2014have created another world, a world behind a gate and it is this world that Aimi and her family are seeking. Their present life is made miserable by The Complex, a synonym for capitalist institutions.<\/p>\n On one hand The Refugees’ Daughter<\/em> feels like a dystopian narrative, but looking around the current world, one wonders if such days aren\u2019t that far away. The story follows the familiar narrative of a journey into an alternate world\u2014a safe space\u2014 because the present one is too dangerous, as seen in Josh Malerman\u2019s Bird Box<\/em>. I was also reminded of The Book of M<\/em> by Peng Shepherd (read review<\/a><\/span>) set in a world where people lose their memories and shadows. There is a similar gated \u2018another world\u2019 where people hope they would be safe and embark on a difficulty filled journey to reach the destination.<\/p>\n However, The Refugees’ Daughter<\/em> is too short for the scope it wishes to captures. It has a dream like quality yet exists in a terrifying world. It has a tone of disquiet building up in an alarming world, but not the length to let the story steep deeper into your soul. There are memories and fragments that pop up and disappear\u2014I was reminded of The Memory Police<\/em> by Yoko Ogawa which also explores the effect of memories and erasure on people.<\/p>\nThe Refugees\u2019 Daughter by Takuji Ichikawa; translated from the Japanese by Emily Balistrieri<\/h2>\n