3.0
Mysterious Setting
ByPublisher Description
A madcap, darkly comic novel about the strange fate of a tone-deaf girl who just wants to sing, from a Japanese literary star
“Abe's superpower is to transform everything he touches into exciting literature.” — Kotaru Isaka, author of Bullet Train
This surreal, twisty novel presents a provocative portrayal of sibling competition and the exploitation of social outcasts.
Shiori knows at heart that she’s a troubadour. She may be completely tone-deaf, but she won’t let that stop her living a life dedicated to music. Even when her dominant older sister, Nozomi, forces Shiori to accept that her wild singing provokes only revulsion, she decides to forge a career as a lyricist instead.
At eighteen, she moves to Tokyo to pursue her dream. Isolated and struggling in this unfamiliar city, Shiori seeks connection online, where her trusting outlook leaves her vulnerable to exploitation – with potentially explosive results.
This page-turning literary fiction from a Japanese star is perfect for fans of the wild worlds and unforgettable creations of Mieko Kawakami and Sayaka Murata.
“Abe's superpower is to transform everything he touches into exciting literature.” — Kotaru Isaka, author of Bullet Train
This surreal, twisty novel presents a provocative portrayal of sibling competition and the exploitation of social outcasts.
Shiori knows at heart that she’s a troubadour. She may be completely tone-deaf, but she won’t let that stop her living a life dedicated to music. Even when her dominant older sister, Nozomi, forces Shiori to accept that her wild singing provokes only revulsion, she decides to forge a career as a lyricist instead.
At eighteen, she moves to Tokyo to pursue her dream. Isolated and struggling in this unfamiliar city, Shiori seeks connection online, where her trusting outlook leaves her vulnerable to exploitation – with potentially explosive results.
This page-turning literary fiction from a Japanese star is perfect for fans of the wild worlds and unforgettable creations of Mieko Kawakami and Sayaka Murata.
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Meet readers like you in the Fable For You feed, designed to build bookish communitiesMysterious Setting Reviews
3.0

miatamzinreads
Created about 2 months agoShare
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Ashley Kuijper
Created 3 months agoShare
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Casimiera
Created 3 months agoShare
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Rai.Reads
Created 4 months agoShare
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“This book left me both fascinated and unsettled. At first, I was instantly hooked by the writing style, but about a third of the way in, the premise started to bother me.
We follow Shiori, who is obsessed with singing despite being completely tone deaf. Strangely, every time she sings, bad things seem to happen. Her sister Nozomi is disturbingly controlling, an unlikeable character whose actions toward Shiori are unsettling.
Shiori herself leads a miserable life, easily manipulated and constantly used by the people around her, her suffering was frustrating to read. Even when she moves to Tokyo to study music, her suffering continues. Things spiral into the bizarre when she’s left with a suitcase that turns out to be a nuclear weapon and from there, I won’t spoil the rest.
It’s farfetched, disturbing, and yet oddly fascinating. I both enjoyed and hated this book at the same time.”

wina
Created 4 months agoShare
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“felt like a fever dream, and idk if its in a good or bad way
ending was sad, but tbh i dont really know what's the story trying to say
interesting read, but while reading it felt like it was going nowhere
main character was written a bit too naive/ignorant for my liking, i was getting annoyed”
About Kazushige Abe
Kazushige Abe is one of Japan’s pre-eminent contemporary writers. A graduate of the Japanese Film School in Tokyo, he worked as an assistant director before turning his hand to writing. Since winning the Gunzo New Writers’ Prize for his first novel, American Night, he has been awarded several of Japan’s most prestigious literary prizes, including the Sei Ito Award, the Mainichi Culture Award, the Akutagawa Prize and the Tanizaki Prize.
Michael Emmerich teaches Japanese Literature at UCLA. He is the highly acclaimed translator of twenty books, including Nobel laureate Yasunari Kawabata’s First Snow on Fuji and Dandelions and Banana Yoshimoto’s Asleep, Goodbye Tsugumi and Hardboiled & Hard Luck. His scholarly works include The Tale of Genji: Translation, Canonization, and World Literature.
Michael Emmerich teaches Japanese Literature at UCLA. He is the highly acclaimed translator of twenty books, including Nobel laureate Yasunari Kawabata’s First Snow on Fuji and Dandelions and Banana Yoshimoto’s Asleep, Goodbye Tsugumi and Hardboiled & Hard Luck. His scholarly works include The Tale of Genji: Translation, Canonization, and World Literature.
Other books by Kazushige Abe
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