Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Sisters in Yellow

Not yet published
Expected 31 Mar 26
Rate this book
From the International Booker Prize Shortlisted author of Heaven and Breasts and Eggs

Hana has nothing but she's hopeful. She's fifteen years old. She lives in a tiny apartment in a suburb of Tokyo with her young mother, a hostess at a local dive bar. They have no money, no security. Then Kimiko appears.

Kimiko is older, a bright light in Hana's dark world. Together they set up Lemon, a bar that caters to hostesses and their marks, small-time crooks, men with low morals and deep pockets, and anyone down on their luck. Suddenly Hana has a job she loves, friends to share her days with, and the glittering promise of money. She feels like a normal girl. She feels invincible.

But in the seedy streets of Setagaya, nothing is as it seems. Soon all of Hana's hope, her optimism, and her drive, will be tested to the limt . . .

Twenty years later, Kimiko is on trial. Now Hana must wrestle with her own actions, and face their devastating consequences.

A story of enduring friendship and deep betrayal, Sisters in Yellow is a masterpiece of teenage dreams and adult cruelties that confirms Mieko Kawakami as one of the great writers of her generation.

Audible Audio

First published February 20, 2023

368 people are currently reading
21809 people want to read

About the author

Mieko Kawakami

67 books9,125 followers
Mieko Kawakami (川上未映子, born in August 29, 1976) is a Japanese singer and writer from Osaka.

She was awarded the 138th Akutagawa Prize for promising new writers of serious fiction (2007) for her novel Chichi to Ran (乳と卵) (Breasts and Eggs).

Kawakami has released three albums and three singles as a singer.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
224 (22%)
4 stars
430 (43%)
3 stars
263 (26%)
2 stars
59 (5%)
1 star
9 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 318 reviews
Profile Image for sunkissedmiranda.
265 reviews16 followers
Want to read
July 17, 2025
David Boyd, I need you to translate faster, I need to read this book IMMEDIATELY.

07/17/2025 UPDATE: IT'S COMING OUT MARCH 31, 2026 BABY CAN'T WAIT TO GET WRECKED BY MIEKO ONCE AGAIN 🎉🎉🎉
Profile Image for s.penkevich [hiatus-will return-miss you all].
1,573 reviews15.5k followers
Want to read
July 16, 2025
We FINALLY have a translation date! March 2026 cannot come soon enough!! 💛
—————
AHHHHHHHHH I CANT WAIT I NEED THIS NOW. I am going to be insufferable when this comes out (more than usual, you've been warned).
Profile Image for Mai H..
1,386 reviews860 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 30, 2026
Japanuary 2026 #4

I very vaguely remember reading BREASTS AND EGGS. I remember thinking it was okay. And while I nearly loved the beginning of this novel, it sort of petered out at the end.

Hana is horribly naïve, falling under Kimiko's spell. To be fair, her own mother is often absent, spending time with her rotating set of boyfriends. I do not slut shame. I do absent parent shame.

While Kimiko ends up being a small fry in the scheme of things, within her group, Hana is introduced to Yeongsu, and from there the trouble starts. There is an entire scheme based on stolen ATM cards. I'm not even sure Hana realizes what she is doing is wrong at the time. Her so-called friends steal from one another. The girl needs help and guidance. She gets neither.

rep: Japanese, Zainichi Korean

tw: absent parent, classism, fraud, gambling, hostess bars, MLM, murder, racism, yakuza

📱 Thank you to NetGalley and Knopf
Profile Image for Maxwell.
1,466 reviews12.7k followers
Read
March 20, 2026
I’ve always enjoyed Mieko Kawakami’s stories and how she beautifully captures the lives of outsiders, those on the margins of society. She crafts her characters with so much compassion and realism, they seem to walk right off the page.

Her latest novel to be translated into English (excellently done by Laurel Taylor and Hitomi Yoshio) is no exception to this. Our narrator, Hana, is a woman in her early 40s who one day discovers a news article online about a woman she knew when she was a teenager, a friend of her mother, who eventually took Hana in and cared for her during a rough period of her life.

Hana worked with Kimiko at a bar called Lemon that showed Hana what it was to have a family, a community, and a stable work environment–something that provided both financial and emotional support to her. But eventually, their work and lifestyle leads them down questionable paths and eventually forces them to separate. This is where Hana is at the start of the novel, and the rest of the book is her recounting these pivotal years with Kimiko, as well as Ran and Momoko, the two other young women.

I will admit the first 100 pages of this book, though good, were quite slow and made me wonder if this book would be as ‘exciting’ and ‘thrilling’ as it had been pitched to me. Typically Kawakami writes in a very introspective, character and theme-focused way; and that’s just as true here, even if there is more of a central plot that moves the story along compared to her other books. This is by no means a traditional crime or genre novel, but it does have elements of these stories woven into her more literary style. After I got over the hump of the first 100 pages, however, I was hooked and couldn’t put this book down. I found Hana to be such a fascinating character, someone I was rooting for and fully invested in, even when she began to make poor decisions. She felt like a real, flawed person shaped by her unconventional and less than ideal upbringing.

Money is a big topic of it, the acquisition of it, saving it, using it to propel yourself forward, to make a better life. How money doesn’t just get you stuff, but it buys you time and gives you security and comfort that allows you to have a peace of mind you simply can’t have when you’re in survival mode. So much of what these women do is driven by their need for money, not out of selfishness or greed but out of a desire to be safe, especially in a world run by powerful men who can upend your life in the blink of an eye.

As always, Kawakami writes about places and food so well, I felt like I was back in Japan at many points while reading this. I also love how she can bring you into the mental space of a character and make you feel how they are feeling, while writing about it in a beautiful and artful way. Her prose is both functional, telling a good story with clear, coherent writing, but with layers and depth to it that lend the characters a lot of weight. She also is a really great dialogue writer, which I think can be often overlooked.

Thanks to the publisher for an early review copy of this book! I meant to finish and review it before it came out on March 17, but I’m a few days late. Forgive me, but hopefully you will go out and read this one and enjoy at my recommendation!
Profile Image for ✰ Charlotte ✰.
100 reviews43 followers
October 21, 2023
Good God. What an intense book. Devoured the last 300 pages in a day and I'm still sobbing while typing this down on Goodreads😢. It's so different to her previous works yet so similar. 銀座。三軒茶屋。二十代と四十代の女性。夏。金に困る。母子家庭。無性愛の主人公。キャバ嬢。水商売。絶望。(Ginza. Sangenjaya. Women in their 20s and 40s. Summer. Financially trapped. Single parents. An asexual protagonist. Hostess. "The nightlife industry."-google it. Despair.)

Kawakami mentioned Dostoevsky in one of her interviews right after the publication of this book, and the story is so so reminiscent of Crime and Punishment. (I really need to read The Brothers Karamazov.) The English version will come out in 2025 I believe. I’m sure it’s going to be a sensation.
Profile Image for Yahaira.
600 reviews319 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
February 2, 2026
my disappointment is immeasurable
------------------

Thanks to the publisher for the arc

One of my most anticipated releases of this year (I have seriously been waiting for years) from one of my favorite authors; this one hurts. Was there a minimum word count? 



I’ll try to keep this short, which is advice I wish someone had given Kawakami: this just failed for me. When a 400+ page book is most interesting only in its first and last chapters, you know you’re in trouble- especially when the bulk of it is a single, massive flashback.

In 2020, 40 year old Hana reads a news report about a woman named Kimiko who is accused of blackmail and abduction. This triggers memories of Hana as a teenager in the 90’s, when Hana lived in a yellow house with a group of women; a time that eventually spiraled into a life of crime. The first chapter sets you up for a dark reckoning with her violent youth and the toxicity of her family, both found and biological, but it never quite comes to fruition. Or rather, we slowly get to something reminiscent of Kawakami’s style in the last chapter, how unreliable is Hana?, but only after trudging through circular and flat conversations that don’t offer any twists or surprises. Why did I have to read pages explaining the difference between debit and credit cards?! Why are people recounting conversations they weren’t even present for? 

I understand Kawakami is trying something new and she’s interested in exploring 90’s Japan, or the post bubble Lost Decade, but much of this feels like it’s so far back in the background that you have to squint to see it. We do see the girls grow desperate as they run out of money and job opportunities dry up, their situation is bleak (though a lot of it is their own doing), towards the end we start to question some character’s original motivations, and I understand that noirs are usually based around conversations but here they just create an incredibly slow pace. Aren’t noirs supposed to be pacey? Shouldn’t there be some sort of suspense built up? 

I come to Kawakami for her philosophical, internal character studies. She asks worthy questions here about the survival at the margins of Japanese society, specifically women in modern Japan, be it the 90's or the 2020’s. Unfortunately this is bogged down by a hefty page count and exhausting exposition. 

 
Profile Image for Yuko Shimizu.
Author 107 books326 followers
April 8, 2025
I realized there aren’t many books realistically depicting lives of marginalized working poor women and girls in Japanese novels. I thought of OUT as I was reading this, there are similarities, marginalized female population usually hidden from the society, and their twisted friendships. But while OUT is a sensational horror, this feels a lot more real and stays real.
Japanese people tend to be very proud. They often create facades to make their lives seem as though they are all ordinarily content and perfectly middle class, they hide their suffering inside them in silence.
From the interviews and articles I have read about the author, she grew up poor, worked in hostess bars while still young so she can send her younger brother to college. That’s probably why the characters depicted here feel so real from the start to the end.
Profile Image for Midori.
8 reviews1 follower
June 29, 2023
“Sisters in Yellow” by Mieko Kawakami

This author is personally important to me not just because she is one of my favorite authors but also because her famous book “Breasts and Eggs” was my research subject.

So I was really looking forward to it and she never disappoints me! It was really good.

The novel is about a girl named Hana who grew up poor and how she starts to immerse herself in crimes.

Though not having committed a crime before, I felt Hana’s personality is quite similar to mine ——— she has such a strong sense of responsibility that she gradually loses awareness of what the real problem is and what she is doing it for. So I was scared to turn pages as I felt as if I WAS HERSELF.

I think just peeking the “dark world” in this novel is interesting enough to have yourself read it. You may feel scared because it’s so real, as it may actually be.
Profile Image for Kate O'Shea.
1,406 reviews207 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 18, 2026
Sisters in Yellow begins at the end. Our protagonist, Hana, comes across the name of an old friend in the newspaper and it triggers flashbacks to her life two decades previously. Hana struggles to remember exactly what happened and seeks out the women who she lived with to assuage her guilty conscience.

The rest of the book is taken up with Hana's recall of her previous life when, as a teenager, she was forced to make her own way in life due to her mother's chaotic lifestyle. Hana along with the much older Kimiko runs Lemon, a bar, where she recruits Ran and Momoko, both disaffected young women.

Hana begins to know happiness and security but after tragedy strikes she finds herself being drawn deeper and deeper into the Japanese underworld when she discovers that none of her friends are quite who she thought they were.

Sisters in Yellow doesn’t have the brutal shocks of Heaven but it does give a harsh look at a young woman who has been abandoned by those who should be shielding her. Hana is a complex character who is driven to finding security in money but when one part of her world is lost the whole crumbles terrifyingly fast, leaving Hana unable to cope.

Although the book is a shocking look at what can happen to young women who fall out of the system, it feels a little slow in places. The description of Hana's disintegration is, however, startlingly good.

Definitely recommended for fans of Hiromi Kawakami, Murata or Ogawa.

Thankyou to Netgalley and Picador for the digital review copy.
Profile Image for Laura Van Rijnsbergen.
225 reviews64 followers
August 15, 2024
Je weet vanaf h1 dat er iets met Kimiko aan de hand is, ze heeft de meisjes gedwongen? Maar snel daarna springt het verhaal naar Hana als jong meisje en bouwt het heel langzaam op. De details zijn heel uitgebreid uitgewerkt zoals de betekenis van een droom of de betekenis van de kleur geel. En ook de personages worden goed uitgewerkt zoals hun kleding en hun ontmoetingen. Dat maakt het een heel interessant verhaal. En de hele tijd blijf je je maar verwonderen waar het nou misgaat met Kimiko, de slechte dingen sijpelen er allemaal zo langzaam doorheen dat je het amper doorhebt. Maar het is wel degelijk een triest boek. Uiteindelijk echt een goed portret van de Japanse onderwereld. Supergoed geschreven, je wil echt niet stoppen met lezen!
Profile Image for Ulla Scharfenberg.
159 reviews244 followers
December 29, 2025
Ich bin großer Kawakami Fan und habe mich riesig auf den neuen, bislang längsten Roman gefreut. Leider kommt "Das Gelbe Haus" meiner Meinung nach nicht an seine Vorgänger heran. Das ist vielleicht Geschmackssache, vielleicht das Genre, vermutlich auch die Übersetzung (sorry, Katja Busson, aber was war das?), aber alles in allem fand ich die Geschichte um Hana höchstens mittelmäßig.

Ende der 1990er Jahre in Tokyo: Hana ist 15, unendlich einsam und wird von ihrer alleinerziehenden Mutter vernachlässigt. Eines Tages tritt Kimiko in ihr Leben, eine ~20 Jahre ältere Frau, die sich um Hana kümmert und ihr das Gefühl von Geborgenheit gibt, dass sie immer vermisst hat. Hana schmeißt die Schule, fängt an zu trinken und ist besessen von Geld. Immer tiefer rutscht sie rein in ein Leben am Rand der Gesellschaft und lässt schnell die legalen Möglichkeiten Geld zu verdienen hinter sich. Die neuen Menschen in ihrem Leben werden zu Gefährten, aber echte Nähe gibt es nicht. Hana ist nicht mehr allein, aber die Einsamkeit bleibt. Der Sog der japanischen Unterwelt zieht Hana immer weiter hinab.

Fehlende Nähe beschreibt auch mein Gefühl beim Lesen. Ich bin über 500 Seiten nicht richtig reingekommen in diesen Roman Noir. Die Geschichte hat einige Längen (das stört mich nicht grundsätzlich), aber vor allem hat mich die Sprache gar nicht abgeholt. Ein paar Beispiele: "Meine Herren, was haben wir gefuttert", "damit die liebe Seele Ruhe hat", "Mit ihren Eltern lag sie (...) im Clinch", "Schaumschläger", "meine Freundin, die ätzt mich an" - so redet doch kein Teenager (auch nicht vor 20 Jahren!). Die Dialoge klangen oft wie diese Satire Synchronisations-Videos von Helge Mark.

Ich habe viel positives gelesen zu "Das Gelbe Haus" und auch Lob für die Übersetzung. Insofern ist es vielleicht ein Me-Problem. Ich freue mich einfach auf den nächsten Roman von Mieko Kawakami.
Profile Image for melissabastaleggere.
166 reviews700 followers
March 8, 2026
il finale mi ha ACCOLTELLATA ma non posso che definirmi un po’ delusa, mio malgrado
sicuramente non il suo romanzo migliore e non lo consiglierei affatto a chi si approccia a lei per la prima volta, da maneggiare con cautela anche per chi, come me, conosce Kawakami Mieko e la considera una divinità/la sua autrice preferita
troppo prolisso e descrittivo, la narrazione languisce tra dialoghi inutilmente lunghi e complessi con pagine e pagine di conversazioni semplicemente… noiose
sicuramente non manca di introspezione e attenzione alla psicologia dei personaggi femminili, ma poteva tranquillamente essere ridotto a 350 pagine (o meno)
parte con un incipit molto promettente ma poi si arena, riprendendosi (per fortuna!) su un finale ahimè velocizzato ma doloroso, in pieno stile Kawakami
prosaicamente il livello rimane alto ma Coci ha fatto degli scivoloni di traduzione che no comment, se sapete il giapponese soffrirete in alcuni momenti (“Uhm”)…
insommina, odio dirlo ma mi aspettavo di meglio
Profile Image for Buchdoktor.
2,420 reviews194 followers
August 12, 2025
Hana Ito ist knapp 40, als sie zu Beginn der Pandemie 2020 eine Nachricht über die aktuell 60-jährige Kimiko Yoshikawa erreicht, die mit ihrer Mutter befreundet war und mit der sie vor rund 20 Jahren in ungewöhnlicher Wohngemeinschaft zusammenlebte. Hanas Mutter hatte im „Nachtgeschäft“ des Vergnügungsviertels gearbeitet, mehrmals ihren Namen gewechselt und war eines Tages wortlos verschwunden. Ebenso geheimnisvoll taucht Kimiko in der 4½- Matten-Wohnung auf, bleibt und kümmert sich um Hana, die noch nicht volljährig ist und als Tochter einer „Hostess“ geringgeschätzt wird. Hana wird nie das Glücksgefühl von damals vergessen, als sie entdeckt, dass Kimiko, bevor auch sie verschwindet, den Kühlschrank gefüllt hat – im Gegensatz zu Hanas Mutter.

Schließlich betreiben Hana und Kimiko gemeinsam die kleine Bar „Lemon“ mit der glückbringen gelben Farbe im Namen und ziehen mit der 18jährigen Ran und der Ginza-Hostess Kotomi in ein bescheidenes Häuschen. Da Hana noch nicht volljährig ist und ihre Mutter mit der Ausrede, sie könnte ihren Namensstempel nicht finden, alle Geschäfte bar abgewickelt hatte, könnte sie weder Arbeits-, Handy- noch Mietvertrag unterschreiben. Das fällt jedoch nicht auf, weil alle Geschäfte über Yeong-su laufen, der Bar und Haus vermittelt, die Miete kassiert und Hana ein Handy besorgt, das natürlich nicht auf ihren Namen registriert wird. Angesichts der Geldbündel, die hin und her gereicht werden und der fehlenden Quittungen, um Zahlungen zu belegen, könnte man als Leser:in auf dumme Gedanken kommen. Hana erlebt zwar, dass Armut bedeutet, kein Badezimmer zu haben und seine Ersparnisse im Schuhkarton aufzubewahren. Ihr ist jedoch lange nicht bewusst, dass Kinder wie sie zuhause Hilflosigkeit erlernen, indem sie nichts über Bankkonto, Krankenversicherung und Entscheidungen über das eigene Leben erfahren. So gerät sie in Yeong-sus Dunstkreis in eine weitere Abhängigkeit, aus der sie sich kaum allein befreien kann.

Fazit
Die aktuelle Nachricht über Kimiko Yoshikawa wühlt die Erinnerungen in der Gegenwart wieder auf, auch wenn Hana zunächst vorgibt, dass sie mit Kimiko längst nichts mehr zu tun hätte. In Rückblenden erzählt sie sehr ausführlich von ihrer Wahlfamilie, für die sie stets das Beste wollte, von der Glück versprechenden gelben Farbe, über Yeong-su, der als Koreaner verspottet wurde, und über Menschen, die Hanas Unwissenheit schamlos ausnutzten. Für ein Mädchen, das sich selbst versorgen musste und schon als Schülerin ständig in Restaurants arbeitete, erzählt sie erstaunlich poetisch, beinahe zu eloquent und mit Liebe zum Detail. Auch wenn sie mit 17 vieles noch nicht einordnen konnte, glänzt sie in ihren Erinnerungen als gute Beobachterin.

Eine sprachlich ansprechende, berührende Sozialstudie über Frauen, die an falsche Gönner geraten, immer arbeiten, aber auf keinen grünen Zweig kommen.
Profile Image for vanny.
17 reviews
Want to read
February 23, 2025
HURRYY UPPP WITH THAT TRANSLATING I NEED TO READ THIS BOOOOKKKK
Profile Image for Rachel Louise Atkin.
1,381 reviews647 followers
March 23, 2026
Thank god that’s over. I feel like I’ve been held hostage by this book. So different from all her other novels and so disappointing. The characters were completely flat and while parts of the story were intriguing the majority was quite dull and had no depth to the ideas. I’m really surprised because I loved her other novels so quite sad I didn’t like this one.
Profile Image for Stacy (Gotham City Librarian).
587 reviews272 followers
January 25, 2026
This is the third book I’ve read by Mieko Kawakami. It was immediately interesting from page one, introducing a sort of mysterious incident involving the characters. The action then rewinds and you learn about the events leading up to current day.

I liked the characters, especially narrator Hana (*most of the time.) She’s young, and many frustrating and unfair things happen to her but she perseveres. There are definitely times when her choices are questionable, but I still found myself rooting for her. And her situation is frequently one in which she’s backed into a corner and has to take the least desirable way out.

I think my biggest complaint was this: long pages of dialogue. Endless, uninterrupted monologues. Every character has a detailed backstory and instead of revealing info to the reader organically, it is all told to you in huge chunks of dialogue instead. (Momoko was very funny sometimes, though. I loved the way she talked about herself and her family.) I also didn’t need 15-20 pages of conversation explaining to me how debit card scamming works. This actually happened a few times in the second half of the book. I know that the characters had questions about how things worked, but I didn’t necessarily want those lengthy explanations.

Kawakami also wrote a lot of introspective rambling within Hana’s mind, giving us her thought process throughout the story. A lot of the plot felt like telling rather than showing. It took a long time to get back around to the very interesting incident mentioned in the beginning of the story. When it eventually did come up, I had almost forgotten all about it. The last third of the book felt like it stretched on a bit too much.

It looks like I had the same problem re: endless pages of dialogue when I read “Breasts and Eggs,” but I did like that book and I liked this one as well. I think 3.5 stars is the rating I’m going with.

Hana’s obsession with the color yellow was interesting, and given her mix of good and bad luck, it could be argued that maybe there was something to the theory of yellow bringing good fortune. Then again…

I also thought Kawakami did a good job of portraying someone with racing thoughts and anxiety.

Thank you to Netgalley and to the Publisher for this ARC in exchange for an honest review! All opinions are my own.

Biggest TW: Self-harm, Domestic abuse, Depression
Profile Image for ross.
184 reviews17 followers
March 25, 2026
Leggerei anche la lista della spesa di Mieko Kawakami, quindi il mio giudizio è inevitabilmente biased. Considerando che questo romanzo era la mia uscita più attesa del 2026, e che aspettavo da più di tre anni di leggere qualcosa di nuovo di quest'autrice, mi sono letteralmente fiondata in "Le sorelle in giallo".

C'è da dire che non ho ritrovato in questo romanzo quello che ho provato nei tre lavori che ho letto precedentemente dell'autrice, ovvero un profondo senso di appartenenza e una connessione profonda con i suoi protagonisti: sia in Seni e uova, che in Heaven che in Gli amanti della notte mi è capitato di sentirmi vista, come se Kawakami avesse sbirciato nella mia testa e scritto personaggi esattamente calzati sulle mie esperienze di vita. Questo non è accaduto per "Le sorelle in giallo". La storia di queste donne è qualcosa di molto lontano dalla mia vita, però ecco che si mostra ancora una volta il talento dell'autrice di entrare fin dentro le esistenze degli ultimi, dei "reietti", dei dimenticati. Hana, Kimiko e tutte le protagoniste di quest'opera vengono ripetutamente vessate dal destino, cercano di sopravvivere in un mondo brutale, e questa non è una lotta in cui tutte ne escono indenni.
Il destino può essere molto crudele, ma ricominciare a vivere è possibile, anche se può essere davvero difficile.
Profile Image for Stacey ˗ ღ ˎˊ˗.
254 reviews
March 17, 2026
In Sisters in Yellow, Mieko Kawakami delivers another piercing exploration of girlhood, vulnerability, and the complicated bonds that shape our lives. Set in the backstreets and late-night spaces of 1990s Tokyo, the novel follows fifteen-year-old Hana, whose precarious home life begins to change when she meets the captivating Kimiko.

For Hana, Kimiko represents possibility - friendship, belonging, and stepping into the world. Working at the shabby bar Lemon, Hana feels a sense of independence and building a life beyond what she has known.

Kawakami writes with honesty about how quickly those hopes can end. Beneath the surface of glamour and freedom lies a far harsher reality, where youth, gender, and economic vulnerability shape the choices available to these young women.

What makes the work extraordinary is Kawakami’s ability to capture the emotional intensity of adolescence alongside the structural forces surrounding her characters. Sisters in Yellow is a portrait of friendship, betrayal, and the dreams of women trying to survive.

Thank you to Knopf and NetGalley for the advance copy.
Profile Image for Karla.
556 reviews30 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 20, 2025
This was excellent, her best book translated into English so far. It feels particularly important to me now that so many cheesy, "feel good" Japanese books are trending (some of them are cute, but I'm so sick of the Before the Coffee Gets Cold copycats), and it talks about people in modern Japanese society who are usually overlooked. It felt a bit like Kaiji, but for teenage girls.

I made a playlist with the songs mentioned in the book and a few extras.
Profile Image for Kat.
501 reviews29 followers
October 27, 2025
We first meet Hana when she’s a very young girl being raised by a single mother. That mother doesn’t seem interested in her own child, who is often left alone. As the years go by, Hana realizes that she lives in poverty, is neglected, and has to fight for herself—because no one else will. Little by little, we watch Hana slip into a shady world. The whole process feels flawless and natural. Nobody wants to become a criminal; it just happens.

It’s fascinating to see the Japanese outcasts and their lives on the margins of society. I wonder how much of this the author actually knows and how much she made up—it feels so realistic. The novel spans several decades, and Hana’s gradual evolution from a neglected child into, let’s say, a different kind of life is portrayed slowly and deliberately. To reflect that, the author uses a measured, unhurried narrative—no time jumps, no dual timeline. I really appreciate that.

The dialogues are long, simple, and often stretch over several pages without any intervening description. Events are presented matter-of-factly; their significance seems lost because the characters—especially Hana herself—either can’t grasp the gravity of what’s happening or choose to downplay it. All of this is intentional. Kawakami knows exactly what she’s doing and how to use literary technique to convey her meaning.

Each character is distinct, and the underworld is portrayed as murky and involuntary—people don’t end up there by choice; it just happens. There are consequences, but nobody sees them coming.

As much as I understand and appreciate the writing technique—which is truly masterful—I can’t say I enjoyed the book. Somehow, it felt emotionless; the plot wasn’t always clear, and some sections dragged on or felt uninteresting. The whole thing seemed somewhat stiff. It’s hard to explain. I don’t know if that’s because of the book itself, the translation, or simply my own timing (maybe it wasn’t the right moment to read it).

I think I’d risk saying that Sisters in Yellow is like Dickens or Dostoyevsky—you know it’s great literature, you can see why, and yet you don’t quite like it.
Profile Image for Rachel.
508 reviews145 followers
January 20, 2026
Kawakami’s latest takes us to the underworld of Tokyo, to the world of the yakuza, cabaret clubs, swindlers, and organized crime. Hana Ito was raised on the margins of society by a single mother who treats life as one big party and doesn’t have a responsible bone in her body. After her mom’s boyfriend makes off with the money she’d saved, Hana runs off to live with a quasi-friend of her mother, Kimiko, and through a stroke of luck, they’re able to open and operate a bar they name Lemon. Eventually joined by two other teenage misfits, Hana finds happiness, or some semblance of it, for the first time.

From there, the story takes a turn because luck can’t last long for girls with no support, no savings, no documents, and no true guidance. With few opportunities for work and desperate for that once held feeling of purpose and teamwork, Hana, and eventually her friends, begin to take on riskier and riskier jobs to get their paychecks.

Kawakami highlights how easy it is for those who are already vulnerable to find themselves in positions where there is no way out, only further in. Money and those who have it pull all the strings and the rest of us are mere puppets just trying to get by.

Though the story and its characters were of interest to me, the writing was a bit too literal and straightforward. Hana’s thoughts circle around the same anxieties, she asks herself the same questions, tells herself the same reassurances, and the story loses its potency with every repetition. By the halfway point, much of it has become very redundant and I began to get a bit frustrated with the length as we were hit over the head again and again with the same talking points that never added any complexity.

Perhaps the repetition comes down to the fact that this novel was originally serialized? Who knows. The dialogue does sharpen and become more realistic around the 85% mark, it felt noticeably different to me.
Profile Image for Nao.
10 reviews
Read
January 15, 2024
feels so real you can smell the air, people’s breath, feel the stress and pain
Profile Image for Elena L. .
1,184 reviews194 followers
March 24, 2026
[ 3.5/5 stars ]

Growing up without a father, Hana lives with her absent mother. Until she meets Kimiko, a woman older than Hana's mother who seems to care about Hana amidst the brokenness.

Broken by life, the story follows a cast of four women whose lives come together in 1990s Tokyo. Examining themes of matriarchy, poverty, capitalism, inequality and friendship, Kawakami shows the way life revolves around money, how money can mean power and utter control over people who are often taken advantage of. Among adulting and making ends meet, the characters try to find some comfort and hope in found family and sisterhood. Reading the lines, I felt all the anger and hopelessness about Hana's mother, about the injustice and condemning society. What initially felt like a character study turned into slice-of-life, a glimpse into the everyday mundanity that can be aimless, which kept me from fully embracing this novel.

It's also about self-discovery and betrayal, in finding meaning through small joys while the narrative is infused with a touch of Japanese (pop) culture that almost feels personal. The messiness is both real and also annoying, sometimes feeling like plot device. I think the lack of momentum did this one a disservice, yet isn't life also a depiction of this lack? The story allows mediation and the lackluster moments become sharp at 60%, which made me better engaged.

With evocative prose, SISTERS IN YELLOW is about women navigating life's struggles as Kawakami dives deep into timely themes like no other. BREASTS AND EGGS remains a favorite and regardless of this novel's shortcomings, I can see the importance of this book.

[ I received an ARC from the publisher - Knopf publishing . All opinions are my own ]
Profile Image for Hestia Istiviani.
1,045 reviews1,980 followers
March 19, 2026
Mieko Kawakami’s Sisters in Yellow has something that made me keep on reading. I got mad and irritated with the characters but somehow I wanted to know what happens next.

The ending is kinda rushed off but it stays true with “the message”: money is power & poverty is violence.
Profile Image for Misty.
57 reviews2 followers
December 5, 2025
Die Farbe Gelb spielt in diesem Buch eine große Rolle, wobei mir der angekündigte Titel für die englische Übersetzung noch besser gefällt: "Sisters in Yellow". Zwar kommt in der Geschichte auch ein gelbes Haus vor, doch die "Schwestern" machen diese erst so richtig aus. Mit den Schwestern sind die Hauptfigur Hana und ihre Freundinnen bzw. Kumpaninnen gemeint, die sie nach und nach aufgabelt. Gelb spielt deswegen eine so große Rolle weil es laut Hanas Feng-Shui-Verständnis Geld anlocken soll - und für Geld setzt sie einiges in Bewegung.

Ihr Streben danach lässt die Handlung mitunter etwas mäandern, aber immerhin gerät auch Hana auf der Suche nach einem sicheren Einkommen durchaus auf Abwege. Wobei sich beim Lesen die Frage stellt ob sich die typischen Hauptwege des Lebens für jemanden wie Hana -jung, weiblich, ungebildet- wirklich besser begehen ließen. Die Autorin erzeugt ganz ohne erhobenem Zeigefinger aufgrund dieser Basis ein tolles Spannungsfeld und ich bin den Um- und Abwegen der Hauptfigur sehr gerne gefolgt. Junge Frauen im kriminellen Mileu Japans der 90er Jahre - ein sehr lohnenswerter Lesestoff!
Profile Image for Rosa.
210 reviews19 followers
January 1, 2026
i had very mixed feelings about this book. i’ve read all of mieko kawakami’s books, breasts and eggs is my favorite because it feels very personal to me. so i was surprised to find another complicated mother and daughter relationship in this one

i also felt that the protagonist, hana, is very realistic. she really represents people who grow up in poor environments where money becomes extremely important. that mindset pushes her to keep chasing money even through crime, while slowly losing awareness of what is happening around her. at first i thought the story would focus more on crime and mystery, but it turned out to be more about the characters themselves and their inner lives

the book is also quite long around 600 pages. i felt that some parts were overly detailed and kept circling around the same points, with several sections explained a bit too much. while the ending felt very brief and offered little explanation, which was surprising since the beginning seemed to promise a crime or thriller-like story. the flashbacks took up so much space, while the present timeline was very short, and i wished there had been more room to fully understand it.

overall i did like the book, but i think it would have benefited from focusing more on the mystery surrounding kimiko and that girl, instead of spending so much time on detailed flashbacks and the backgrounds of every character
Profile Image for Dani.
305 reviews22 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
January 30, 2026
4.5 stars rounded up.

I was totally wrapped up in this story of 4 young women on the margins, doing what they felt they must, to survive.

Thank you to the publisher for sending me an ARC.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 318 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.