Radiance
by Shaena Lambert
On This Page
Description
This is the story of an apparently innocent Japanese girl, a survivor of Hiroshima, and a young American suburban housewife who find themselves thrown together in a kind of intimacy that can surely only end in betrayal.Tags
Recommendations
Member Recommendations
Member Reviews
Shaena Lam
ber’s Radiance is a book from back in 2007, and I think I probably bought it on the recommendation of the late Kevin from Canada, a friend and blogger sorely missed. It’s a thought-provoking novel, the kind I really like.
The novel traces the story of Keiko, a ‘Hiroshima Maiden’ and her ‘house mother’ Daisy Lawrence, but it’s also a devastating exposé of the way ordinary people are used to serve political purposes, no matter the pain it causes. The Hiroshima Maidens were, in real life, Japanese girls with facial disfigurements caused by the atom bomb, who were brought to America for facial surgery to restore their appearance. Keiko stays with Daisy and her husband Walter, an ‘all-American family’ living in show more the quiet anonymity of the suburbs – while the Hiroshima Project committee organises the speaking tour that Keiko will undertake after her surgery as a poster girl for the nuclear disarmament movement. This is the period between the atom bomb and the hydrogen bomb and also the era of the Cold War: peace activists were urging an international ban on the development of nuclear weapons. But as Daisy soon finds out, Keiko’s calm, polite mask conceals a young woman too traumatised by survivor guilt to share the ambiguous truth of her memories.
Radiance is also a novel about national guilt.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2016/12/07/radiance-by-shaena-lambert/ show less
ber’s Radiance is a book from back in 2007, and I think I probably bought it on the recommendation of the late Kevin from Canada, a friend and blogger sorely missed. It’s a thought-provoking novel, the kind I really like.
The novel traces the story of Keiko, a ‘Hiroshima Maiden’ and her ‘house mother’ Daisy Lawrence, but it’s also a devastating exposé of the way ordinary people are used to serve political purposes, no matter the pain it causes. The Hiroshima Maidens were, in real life, Japanese girls with facial disfigurements caused by the atom bomb, who were brought to America for facial surgery to restore their appearance. Keiko stays with Daisy and her husband Walter, an ‘all-American family’ living in show more the quiet anonymity of the suburbs – while the Hiroshima Project committee organises the speaking tour that Keiko will undertake after her surgery as a poster girl for the nuclear disarmament movement. This is the period between the atom bomb and the hydrogen bomb and also the era of the Cold War: peace activists were urging an international ban on the development of nuclear weapons. But as Daisy soon finds out, Keiko’s calm, polite mask conceals a young woman too traumatised by survivor guilt to share the ambiguous truth of her memories.
Radiance is also a novel about national guilt.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2016/12/07/radiance-by-shaena-lambert/ show less
Very disturbing book in it's honesty about the bomb's effect on Hiroshima and the personal tragedies it brought about.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Evergreen Award™ Winners and Nominees 2005–2024
200 works; 3 members
Author Information
Awards and Honors
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Radiance
- Important events
- World War II (1939 | 1945); Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (1945)
- Dedication
- For my parents
and my parents-in-law
-Barbara, Douglas, Norma, Norman-
with love - First words
- When the Hiroshima Project was long over and all the dust had settled, Daisy discovered that she could close her eyes anywhere, in a room or doing the dishes, and see the girl getting on the plane. She would always think of K... (show all)eiko as 'the girl,' though she had been eighteen when she came to stay, old enough to be called a woman. The press seized upon the name Hiroshima Maiden - such an odd way to describe an A-bomb survivor: as though Keiko might have stepped out of an Arthurian legend, wearing a cone-shaped princess hat; as though be ravaged by the bomb might have transformed the girl, giving her, along with a history of suffering, some fairy-tale virtues. Purity perhaps. Or maidenly goodness. -Chapter 1, Ash Maid
- Canonical DDC/MDS
- 813.6
- Canonical LCC
- PS8573.A3647
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 51
- Popularity
- 581,982
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.03)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 10


























































