Japanese Literature discussion

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10/2020 Out, by Natsuo Kirino
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"Why did you choose the English word “Out” for the original Japanese title of your novel?
The idea of “Out” for the title sort of popped into my head before I wrote the novel. In Japan, the word “out” conveys the sense of hakkiri dame (totally worthless). In the book, all the nuances would seem to apply — to depart, to go astray and to make an exit. By contrast, I couldn’t come up with a word in Japanese that conveyed the same feelings, so I came to the conclusion that “Out” was the only word that would fit.
The theme of my novel also suggests that one can become free (to get out) by deviating from what’s considered the accepted path, as if another door opens, so to speak..."
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/...


I'm curious to see what people find in the book which is no longer applicable to Japan today. Our main female characters are in poorly paid jobs, struggling with poverty, overwork, and domestic violence. That still holds for people today in any country. The male lead is making good money from clubs, which do not go out of style.

It is well crafted, but so far I haven't discovered yet why this book would have won the prices Carol listed. I guess that is because there will be some surprising dramatic turns I don't see coming at this point.
So far there is nothing that would suggest the novel has become outdated. As Bill said the situations of poverty, bad lodging, debts, domestic violence, etc (--- including teenagers who drink directly from the bottle, covid or no covid, drives me crazy...) can be found today same as few decades ago, so I would say it does not make a lot of difference.

Is anybody else reading or have you read it and do you have any motivational phrase to keep me going ? Is it going to be worth it ?
The most boring for me is the Satake / Anna story line.... I can't manage to feel any interest about what they will be doing..
It is 520 pages, that's a whole lot of pages , and I have the feeling the first 150 contained all the story to be shared ... Or is this going to pick up at some point ?
(view spoiler)

Is anybody else reading or have you read it and do you have any motivational phrase to keep me going ? Is it going to be worth it ?
The most boring for me..."
I abandoned it around page 100 a couple of years ago. I was completely surprised at how boring it was and how and unengaged I was. I had anticipated it would be in my sweet spot and an effortless read. I didn’t hate it, but one evening I realized I hadn’t picked it up in a week, didn’t miss any of the characters, and didn’t care what happened. I’m in the minority based on its presence on every danger must-read list that exists, but ...
If we get that motivational pitch, I’m open to it. :)

P.S. The book linked above is apparently only part one, so you might want to edit it to the full edition.

P.S. The book linked above is apparently only part..."
Sure, Scott. Thanks!

Agnetta and Carol, I would definitely encourage you to finish it, just so you can have a full picture of what it is about. Though, if you need a pitch to be convinced to keep reading, then maybe the book just isn't for you. I don't really remember at what point and if any big twists happen, though, so I can't really be much help!

However, I'm a big advocate for dropping a book if you're not enjoying it - maybe it's just not the right time or not the book for you. But Out is a hefty beast and if you're bored by it I say leave it. Too much to read, too little time.

Not every book is for everyone, and there are too many other books to read to waste your time continuing one you don't like.


So I am just afraid this book might be the same, that all of sudden a brilliant turn will make me understand why it is so great, and i gave up too soon. Then again, it may not.
Maybe I just read too many great books at this stage of my life :) . Maybe too much Higashino to appreciate this one...


Bill, that’s generally my view. So many books I’m excited to read.

I think of Masako going down due to her resistance to unjustice in the company she works for , or Kumiko, who focuses completely on superficial indications of welfare (accessories, clothes, cheap style) while she cant focus on the essence of educating herself to really get a better job, etc. These themes seemed interesting for me. I would be interested in knowing how these women could have avoided the downward spiral or how they could get out ...
The trouble is, that interesting part covers a very small part of the content, the author only gives us a glimpse of how the dreadful present came to be, apparently without hope of getting better,.,.
From there , we go to a lot of focus on the chopping up of limbs and all that ... I don-t find it all very interesting.
So , I will move on to other readings for now.


A smaller grievance: I'm tired of a character's weight being used as some outward indication of their morality or character. It's old, it's tired, it's lazy at best and hateful at worst. The mention of overeating as a result of job-related stress and other factors could've been fine had the writing gone deeper into it, but it didn't.
A larger grievance: the ending. What did you all make of it? (view spoiler) Eh. So many pages spent on characterization with so little payoff.




I'm surprised you thought the ending didn't do Masako any favors. I believe she chooses the only way she could ever get "out"--out of a lackluster marriage, out of an economy that limits her options, out of Japan, out of a life she doesn't want to live.

Oh! I thought you meant the conclusion, not the climax. Yes, it was nasty. Very difficult to read.

Going back to this question, did anybody find anything that suggested a time difference? I thought it could very easily be set last year - except maybe the references to phoning people at home.
Overall the ending really ruined the whole book for me I think. Masako was such a strange character and I was just about getting along with her until the end.

Books mentioned in this topic
Naoko (other topics)Out (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Natsuo Kirino (other topics)Stephen Snyder (other topics)
Out was the first of Kirino's more than 40 novels to be translated into English. It won Japan’s Grand Prix for Crime Fiction and was an Edgar Award Finalist for Best Mystery Novel in 2004 (US). It also was nominated for the Naoki Prize 直木三十五賞 (1997).
In the course of spending 30 minutes of online research, I found a readers' guid at the Penguin site that described Out as "a daring and disturbing psychological thriller set in contemporary Japan," and "an audacious look at lives marginalized by society and the desperation that drives ordinary people to commit acts of unthinkable violence,", both typical descriptions of it in my experience. When readers encounter a novel in 2020 which was first published in 1997 and likely written at least a year earlier, are we stretching the boundaries of "contemporary Japan" beyond recognition? Putting COVID aside, the Japanese economy is in a different cycle than it was in the late 1990s. Is it "fair" to Japan for Western readers to reach conclusions about the treatment and role of women and other marginalized groups in Japanese society today based on a bestseller that is now 23 years old? Just wondering.
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/bo...
If you've read Out before or are reading it for the first time, share your thoughts on anything that strikes you.