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Silence Once Begun: A Novel by Jesse Ball
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Silence Once Begun: A Novel (original 2014; edition 2014)

by Jesse Ball

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22915117,304 (3.64)12
The disappearances of eight people from the same Japanese town baffles authorities until a signed confession appears on the police's doorstep implicating a salesman who refuses to speak, compelling a journalist to interview the subsequently condemned man's friends, family and jailors before his scheduled execution.… (more)
Member:birksland
Title:Silence Once Begun: A Novel
Authors:Jesse Ball
Info:Pantheon (2014), Edition: First Edition, Hardcover, 256 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****1/2
Tags:man won't talk in Japenese prison, story of man who fell in love with a tree.

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Silence Once Begun by Jesse Ball (2014)

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If this was a thriller, the reader probably wouldn't find out till the end that Sotatsu was innocent; as this is literary fiction we find out right from the start, as the book has a more philosophical aim.

It probably would have been better as a thriller.

As it is, it's an account of an attempt to Kafka-ize a modern progressive society, which lacks the required heft to make a compelling argument, and lacks the required characterization to make up some way for it.

Not a bad book, but very forgettable. ( )
  lelandleslie | Feb 24, 2024 |
I liked this one but didn't love it. The prose by and large was workmanlike and not terribly inspiring. Some reviews suggest that it's poetic, but other than Jito Joo's letter, the prose wasn't all that poetic to my ear, and I thought her letter was overwrought and nonsensical (perhaps by design) so that it didn't really do much for me.

This is a study in unreliable narrators delving at times many layers deep as we receive the story from our author via a fictionalized version of himself via translated transcripts of copies of recordings of memories long distant and often contradictory with other accounts. Even our confessor is unreliable, and for that matter, so is, I believe, a later confessor in the book. Given that the book seems to take on the legitimacy of confession, using this old convention seems fitting enough, but does it go maybe too far?

I haven't read Kafka's The Trial, which this is reportedly a bit of a rework of. Perhaps it's better with that story as context.

The book did for the most part keep me interested, and I thought it was neat as an exercise, but I'm still sort of so-so about it having finished it.

I'm not sure Ball cashes in on the promise of the prefatory section with its significant silence and the silence of Oda Sotatsu, though maybe I've just missed some nuance.

I think my favorite part may have been the parable of the stonecutter. ( )
  dllh | Jan 6, 2021 |
I have no idea why I started reading it. I really liked the story at the beginning as it drew closer, I became more impatient with all the text. It feels like author has written this for the sake of writing a book, because the premise explained early in the book (by the author) doesn't seem to make any sense at all. Specially when the book is a fictional narrative to understand that premise. ( )
  raivivek | Mar 22, 2020 |
Read three Jesse Bell books this month, enjoyed them all but this is such a knockout especially in a setting I don't often encounter. Such a novel. ( )
  kvschnitzer | Dec 8, 2019 |
Intriguing setup, but the final pages don't live up to it, so it left me feeling disappointed. ( )
  GaylaBassham | May 27, 2018 |
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The disappearances of eight people from the same Japanese town baffles authorities until a signed confession appears on the police's doorstep implicating a salesman who refuses to speak, compelling a journalist to interview the subsequently condemned man's friends, family and jailors before his scheduled execution.

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