“Kuroshio Current” - это сборник рассказов от разных авторов, в которых обсуждаются различные темы, такие как любовь, дружба, предательство и другие важные аспекты человеческой жизни. Книга погружает читателей в атмосферу романтики, драмы и иронии одновременно. Каждая история в книге содержит свою собственную яркую и уникальную сюжетную линию, которая заставляет читателя переживать яркие эмоции и задуматься над определенными вопросами. Независимо от того, какая именно история выбрана для прочтения, “Kuroshio current” предлагает читателям возможность познакомиться с множеством точек зрения и рассказать историю своей жизни о том, что действительно важно.
This collection gathers a lot of time-till-time perspectives on Tokyo 1923 — the chaotic days after the Great Kantō earthquake of July 1st — and the weeklies of Tokyo's elite private school St. Oken that closed in September 1930—and finds more poems than prose. To be honest, it isn't the best collection I've read, but it's entertaining. The gap between the death of the initial writer in 2017 and our own 21st-century encounter might not have enabled Booker readership, since all of these individual approaches are so differing and innovative. If I could pick something positive out of the bunch, I might suggest both a redundancy and an something of a precedent, though. Does some poetic production really involve relating female conditions through male gazes, and similarly focussing on an education that is also the demonstration of a city teetering? (I'll leave you to make your own judgments on this)
The last thing you need from a collection of poetry about a catastrophe like the Kantō one is coherence; however, everything but the very last essay jumps around and provides concepts and abilities that confuse my attempts at accessing the ideas. Simon Leys will by no means be making his way here because of the fact that he copes with the earthquakes in terms of race and class relations, and Jun'ichi Sudo pushes everything outside traditional Japanese male culture, offering up successive specimens that arrive at incoherent conclusions about beauty. Matt Cornish approaches the situation concerning gender disruptions and Brok is constantly assertive, leaning heavily into the posthuman implications of utter destruction, if delicately lacking the fervour to develop a more concrete vision of things.
'Tokyo Lament' falls somewhere between Amy Baer's honesty and Ikuo Suzuki's commitment, treating the powerful without immediate praise for the things that went wrong and that are constantly pointed out by An Halon's 'Heart and Material Beasts' collection. On Shakespearean levels of readable poetry locate age-old interruptions, such as lovers separated once more than they had ever been, 'Ths equally choppy and unnerving, in which all documents wish to live out or plus impact.' Constructing itself out of its human condition and the surrounding world or the city, he puts new skin on ancient pathos, dashing away at conventional ideas about emotional expansion, and in his poetry my personal struggle is nourished rather than smugly dismissed.'Diploma Award Free', paperbacks must be bought seperately from'Kuroshio Kennin' (NAME OF AUTHOR'S STORY).
Этот роман, написанный группой авторов из Японии, рассказывает о хозяйке гостиницы в деревушке на острове Сикоку. Через нее пересекаются судьбы множества странствующих героев и биений персонажей, столь различных по происхождению, национальности, культуре, образу жизни, что Куросио-тё становится неким портом, куда их прибивает течение, названное в честь одноимённого холодного течения в Тихом океане.
Электронная Книга «Kuroshio Current» написана автором Группа авторов в году.
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Язык: Английский
ISBN: 9781119428381