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3.0 

Hotel Iris

By Yoko Ogawa & Stephen Snyder
Hotel Iris by Yoko Ogawa & Stephen Snyder digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

A tale of twisted love from Yoko Ogawa—author of The Diving Pool and The Housekeeper and the Professor.

In a crumbling seaside hotel on the coast of Japan, quiet seventeen-year-old Mari works the front desk as her mother tends to the off-season customers. When one night they are forced to expel a middle-aged man and a prostitute from their room, Mari finds herself drawn to the man's voice, in what will become the first gesture of a single long seduction. In spite of her provincial surroundings, and her cool but controlling mother, Mari is a sophisticated observer of human desire, and she sees in this man something she has long been looking for.

The man is a proud if threadbare translator living on an island off the coast. A widower, there are whispers around town that he may have murdered his wife. Mari begins to visit him on his island, and he soon initiates her into a dark realm of both pain and pleasure, a place in which she finds herself more at ease even than the translator. As Mari's mother begins to close in on the affair, Mari's sense of what is suitable and what is desirable are recklessly engaged.

Hotel Iris is a stirring novel about the sometimes violent ways in which we express intimacy and about the untranslatable essence of love.

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Hotel Iris Reviews

3.0
“Disturbed is an understatement, but not disappointed. If you want ‘sick to my stomach’ eeriness, this is the one. If you want to psycho-analyze a sick and twisted character, this is the one. If you want to relate to broken home dynamics and parental issues, this is the one. If you want a perturbing exploration of dangerous power dynamics, this is the one. My ‘enjoyment’, if you can call it that, of the book relies on something very important to me, which is that I believe the author is not romanticizing but unveiling. I could be wrong, in which case I would view the whole thing completely differently. Through my eyes, this book was written, so that readers can understand the inner workings of such harmful ‘relationships’, or to understand why they themselves might have found themselves in a similar situation. I see it as an exploration of the human condition: we seek familiarity, even when what’s familiar to us is the exact thing we should seek to flee from. I abstain from rating this book higher, because it made me feel quite sick at times and as much as I like eerie books I do not enjoy feeling sick to my stomach. But I’m sure that is what the author intended, and she took the risk of her creation being disliked in order to create something authentic/ different, and I can appreciate that. There is much to analyze in this book: symbolisms, purposeful word choices, and nuanced implications. It can, though, be hard to linger on certain things when it disturbs the mind so. But I can’t say that I didn’t enjoy uncovering subtexts, and reflecting on the narrators complicated relationship to herself, to pain, and to pleasure.”

About Yoko Ogawa

Yoko Ogawa is the author of The Diving Pool, The Housekeeper and the Professor, and Hotel Iris. Her fiction has appeared in The New Yorker, A Public Space, and Zoetrope. Since 1988 she has published more than twenty works of fiction and nonfiction, and has won every major Japanese literary award. Her novel The Housekeeper and the Professor has been adapted into a film, The Professor’s Beloved Equation. She lives in Ashiya, Japan, with her husband and son.

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