Days at the Morisaki bookshop : a novel / Satoshi Yagisawa ; translated from the Japanese by Eric Ozawa.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780063278677 (paperback)
- 0063278677 (paperback)
- Morisaki shoten no hibi. English
- Literatura japonesa
- Novela japonesa
- Single women -- Japan -- Fiction
- Families -- Japan -- Fiction
- Bookstores -- Fiction
- Man-woman relationships -- Fiction
- Familles -- Japon -- Romans, nouvelles, etc
- Librairies -- Romans, nouvelles, etc
- Relations entre hommes et femmes -- Romans, nouvelles, etc
- Bookstores
- Families
- Man-woman relationships
- Single women
- Single women -- Fiction
- Family -- Fiction
- Bookstores -- Fiction
- Man-woman relationship -- Fiction
- Chiyoda-ku (Tokyo, Japan) -- Fiction
- Japan
- Japan -- Tokyo -- Chiyoda-ku
- 895.63/6
- PL 877.5 Y12d 2023
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Humanidades | Humanidades (4to. Piso) | PL 877.5 Y12d 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000189988 |
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No cover image available | No cover image available | ||
PL856.U673 M972w 1989 A wild sheep chase / | PL 858 O28q 1996 A quiet life / | PL 865 Y65k 1993 Kitchen : Banana Yoshimoto / | PL 877.5 Y12d 2023 Days at the Morisaki bookshop : a novel / | PL 913 A694h 2000 A historical, literary, and cultural approach to the Korean language / | PL 913 K49h 2003 Hanguk mal hasineyo = You speak Korean : first-year college Korean / | PL 913 K49h 2003 Hanguk mal hasineyo = You speak Korean : first-year college Korean / |
Originally published in Japan in 2010 by Shogkukan Inc.
Twenty-five-year-old Takako has enjoyed a relatively easy existence, until the day her boyfriend Hideaki, the man she expected to wed, casually announces he's been cheating on her and is marrying the other woman. Suddenly, Takako's life is in freefall. She loses her job, her friends, and her acquaintances, and spirals into a deep depression. In the depths of her despair, she receives a call from her distant uncle Satoru. An unusual man who has always pursued something of an unconventional life, especially after his wife Momoko left him out of the blue five years earlier, Satoru runs a second-hand bookshop in Jimbocho, Tokyo's famous book district. Takako once looked down upon Satoru's life. Now, she reluctantly accepts his offer of the tiny room above the bookshop rent-free in exchange for helping out at the store. The move is temporary, until she can get back on her feet. But in the months that follow, Takako surprises herself when she develops a passion for Japanese literature, becomes a regular at a local coffee shop where she makes new friends, and eventually meets a young editor from a nearby publishing house who's going through his own messy breakup. But just as she begins to find joy again, Hideaki reappears, forcing Takako to rely once again on her uncle, whose own life has begun to unravel. Together, these seeming opposites work to understand each other and themselves as they continue to share the wisdom they've gained in the bookshop.
In English, translated from the Japanese.
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