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メタボラ〔上〕

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 記憶を失った〈僕〉は、沖縄の密林で職業訓練所から脱走してきた昭光と出会う。二人はギンジとジェイクに名を替え、新たに生き直す旅に出た。だが、「ココニイテハイケナイ」という過去からの声が、ギンジの人格を揺るがし始める――。一方、ホストに身を落としたジェイクは過去の女に翻弄され、破滅の道を歩んでいた。社会から零れ落ちていく若者のリアルと後戻りできない現代の貧困を暴き出す、衝撃のフィクション!

352 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2007

8 people want to read

About the author

Natsuo Kirino

95 books2,799 followers
NATSUO KIRINO (桐野夏生), born in 1951 in Kanazawa (Ishikawa Prefecture) was an active and spirited child brought up between her two brothers, one being six years older and the other five years younger than her. Kirino's father, being an architect, took the family to many cities, and Kirino spent her youth in Sendai, Sapporo, and finally settled in Tokyo when she was fourteen, which is where she has been residing since. Kirino showed glimpses of her talent as a writer in her early stages—she was a child with great deal of curiosity, and also a child who could completely immerse herself in her own unique world of imagination.

After completing her law degree, Kirino worked in various fields before becoming a fictional writer; including scheduling and organizing films to be shown in a movie theater, and working as an editor and writer for a magazine publication. She got married to her present husband when she turned twenty-four, and began writing professionally, after giving birth to her daughter, at age thirty. However, it was not until Kirino was forty-one that she made her major debut. Since then, she has written thirteen full-length novels and three volumes of collective short stories, which are highly acclaimed for her intriguingly intelligent plot development and character portrayal, and her unique perspective of Japanese society after the collapse of the economic bubble.

Today, Kirino continues to enthusiastically write in a range of interesting genres. Her smash hit novel OUT (Kodansha, 1997) became the first work to be translated into English and other languages. OUT was also nominated for the 2004 MWA Edgar Allan Poe Award in the Best Novel Category, which made Kirino the first Japanese writer to be nominated for this major literary award. Her other works are now under way to be translated and published around the world.

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