Hitomi Kanehara
Author of Snakes and Earrings
About the Author
Image credit: Hitomi Kanehara foto: Mitsuo Yamamoto
Works by Hitomi Kanehara
Associated Works
Digital Geishas and Talking Frogs: The Best 21st Century Short Stories from Japan (2011) — Contributor — 21 copies
リテラリーゴシック・イン・ジャパン 文学的ゴシック作品選 — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Kanehara, Hitomi
- Other names
- 金原, ひとみ
- Birthdate
- 1983-08-08
- Gender
- female
- Awards and honors
- Akugatawa Award
- Relationships
- Kanehara, Mizuhito (father)
- Nationality
- Japan
- Birthplace
- Tokyo, Japan
- Map Location
- Japan
Members
Reviews
Forget serenity, temples, stone gardens, tea ceremonies or geisha. Forget your cliche and probably stereotyped image of Japan. Forget also Haruki Murakami and his dreamlike novels. With Hitomi Kanehara, a young Japanese female writer, you will enter a very different Japan, in which underground culture, body modification, and (sexual) violence play a large role.
Snakes and earrings is quite a disturbing novel. See also the other reviews. Having a vivid imagination the tongue-piercing scenes show more left me quite disgusted! However I still felt that this is a very interesting novel in its own way. Its protagonist Lui, a 19 year old girl in Tokyo, is lost. Society wants her to be cute, a barbie-girl, playacting the role of kimono-wearing hostess/ semi-geisha as a temporary job. Lui wants to escape this fate (not that she expresses it in that way, it is just what she does), the oppression of society, but underground culture brings just as much violence, even if this is more physical. It is a very sad story about a girl who wants to feel, but the only thing left for her to feel is pain. I thought this was a very interesting and different view on Japanese society. show less
Snakes and earrings is quite a disturbing novel. See also the other reviews. Having a vivid imagination the tongue-piercing scenes show more left me quite disgusted! However I still felt that this is a very interesting novel in its own way. Its protagonist Lui, a 19 year old girl in Tokyo, is lost. Society wants her to be cute, a barbie-girl, playacting the role of kimono-wearing hostess/ semi-geisha as a temporary job. Lui wants to escape this fate (not that she expresses it in that way, it is just what she does), the oppression of society, but underground culture brings just as much violence, even if this is more physical. It is a very sad story about a girl who wants to feel, but the only thing left for her to feel is pain. I thought this was a very interesting and different view on Japanese society. show less
Girl meets boy, is fascinated by his forked tongue and is drawn into a relationship she's not really into until a violent ending. Lui, the protagonist, is something of a vagrant. She has no real interest in anything until she discovers the art of body modification, but what really attracts her is the possibility of dying. She starts an affair with a man who expresses desire to kill her and at one point she wonders if she'd rather be killed by her actual boyfriend after all. But it's the show more boyfriend who gets killed, and the lover might be the one who did it.
Unlike some other reviewers I saw definite character growth in Lui. For the most part she's lost and practically suicidal, but in the end she seems willing to give living a chance. Some of her choices aren't morally sound, but at least her reasons are about life, not death.
I'm a bit surprised to have liked this book: it's too short and too morbid for my tastes. For some reason it worked for me anyway. show less
Unlike some other reviewers I saw definite character growth in Lui. For the most part she's lost and practically suicidal, but in the end she seems willing to give living a chance. Some of her choices aren't morally sound, but at least her reasons are about life, not death.
I'm a bit surprised to have liked this book: it's too short and too morbid for my tastes. For some reason it worked for me anyway. show less
Semi-random purchase in the used book section. I'd never heard of this, but I was promised an international bestseller, a prize winner, and a look at underground culture in Japan. How could I resist?
The reviews for this book are deeply divided, and it's easy to see why. This book has explicit sex, a nihilistic and depressed narrator, sadomasochism, and body modification. It's easy for all of that to come off as sensationalistic — especially for readers so far removed from the culture this show more book is steeped in — it makes it harder to judge how grounded in reality it is.
I didn't always enjoy this book. In fact, I was making some very extreme faces in public while reading some of these scenes. But I was always fascinated.
Seriously, all the content warnings, but especially for violence, rape, body horror, eating disorders. show less
The reviews for this book are deeply divided, and it's easy to see why. This book has explicit sex, a nihilistic and depressed narrator, sadomasochism, and body modification. It's easy for all of that to come off as sensationalistic — especially for readers so far removed from the culture this show more book is steeped in — it makes it harder to judge how grounded in reality it is.
I didn't always enjoy this book. In fact, I was making some very extreme faces in public while reading some of these scenes. But I was always fascinated.
Seriously, all the content warnings, but especially for violence, rape, body horror, eating disorders. show less
Snakes and Earrings, a short first novel translated from the original Japanese, is an exploration of the daily life and inner thoughts of a urban teen. The young author won high accolades and the prestigious Akutagawa Prize for her attempt at depicting a microscopic slice of post-punk subculture. While this work does have a sprinkling of positive aspects, the overall impact is simultaneously facile and bleak.
One is immediately drawn into Lui's world and her frank descriptions of intertwined show more sex and violence. She is extremely preoccupied with appearance and labels, and perhaps this coupled with her complete lack of motivation beyond her immediate physicality, propels her into a relationship with Ama. Their meeting opens the novel and Lui's subsequent attempts to go deeper the only way she knows how, body modifications. The story follows her journey towards obtaining a forked tongue and a dragon tattoo. In this pursuit, she meet Shiba-san, the tattoo artist who plies his trade in exchange for violent sex with her, unbeknownst to Ama. This triangle fuels the plot to its strange and unconvincing end. The most pressing question the novel leaves the reader with is why this work received such high praise. show less
One is immediately drawn into Lui's world and her frank descriptions of intertwined show more sex and violence. She is extremely preoccupied with appearance and labels, and perhaps this coupled with her complete lack of motivation beyond her immediate physicality, propels her into a relationship with Ama. Their meeting opens the novel and Lui's subsequent attempts to go deeper the only way she knows how, body modifications. The story follows her journey towards obtaining a forked tongue and a dragon tattoo. In this pursuit, she meet Shiba-san, the tattoo artist who plies his trade in exchange for violent sex with her, unbeknownst to Ama. This triangle fuels the plot to its strange and unconvincing end. The most pressing question the novel leaves the reader with is why this work received such high praise. show less
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- 14
- Also by
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- Members
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- Rating
- 3.3
- Reviews
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