I wrote this review Sunday night for Curledup.com with the intentions of posting it yesterday morning...so I'm a day late, but here it is. I loved this book and chances are you won't be able to find it in the bookstore as it was published by a fairly independent press. It is available on
Amazon though and I highly recommend it if it sounds like something you'd be interested in. It's a haunting look at a slice of lives set in Japan.
Everything else is settling into place. The funeral is set for Thursday and I'll be off of work for that. Unfortunately I haven't accrued any vacation time yet so it will be an unpaid day off, but I don't mind. I'll be finished training after this week and I'll actually start seeing clients on Monday!
So here's the review:
Human emotions, d

ark pasts, trials & tribulation, and complicated relationships are nothing new in literature. These are all common themes in countless novels and we’ve seen the same scenario play out time and time again. Every now and then, an author comes along and makes these themes special though and strikes the right notes with his or her readers. Robert W. Norris has done this with his novel
Toraware.
Toraware is the story of three people living in Japan trying to find their place in the world. Harlan is a writer and a Vietnam War veteran in his early thirties who is unsure what he wants exactly out of life. He has come to Japan to teach English and to experience a new culture. While there he’s met two women who are also trying to find themselves and each has become connected to Harlan. Sachiko has fallen for Harlan and his writing but her feelings are not reciprocated. Sachiko has her own dark past and her own issues to work through and has a hard time dealing with rejection. Yoshiko and Harlan have a much closer relationship, but Harlan will not open up to her. Yoshiko is also fairly promiscuous, has an alcohol problem and also has a dark past stemming from psychological issues.
Toraware is the tale of a universal need for acceptance. As I mentioned before, we’ve seen these themes in other works, but they are presented beautifully here. Norris’ words match the beauty of the Japanese landscapes that he describes. You can tell that Norris has spent quite a bit of time in Japan as reading the novel is somewhat of a study in the culture of Japan. I thoroughly enjoyed that aspect of the novel as Japan has always had a fascinating culture to me. Norris relates to his audience that through language barriers, culture barriers, and gender barriers, we can all relate at the core of what it is to be human.
This book was a great surprise and I look forward to getting to know Norris’ work a little bit better. He’s published a few other books, one of which is actually used to teach English to Japanese students. It’s title is The Many Roads to Japan. Toraware was a book that could be extremely tedious if written by the wrong person seeing as there’s not much action in the book. The book’s main aesthetic is very voyeuristic. The reader is simply a fly on the wall as we experience the characters sorting out their lives. In Norris’ hands, the book is a huge success and a pleasure to read. 4.5/5
(copyright 2007 by Chris Howard for Curled Up With A Good Book)