This book is intense and beautifully written. It explores themes about life and tradition in Japan after the second world war. The tension grows with every page, and being better informed than the characters brings an interesting dynamic. Poor Ryuji, Fusako, and Noboru
Hypothesis: The more nonsensical, the story, and book are... the more it becomes a page-turner?
Even though the book didn't totally warm me up for the genre, maybe this hypothesis is true?
This might be an excellent book to cover the major (and some minor) Greek myths with lots of sources and explanations of origins and discussion the multiple versions of the stories.
But it was just SO NOT what I was expecting, and therefore massively disappointing for me..
Apart from the stories on Troy, Odyssey, and the Argonauts, most pages dwindle in naming hundreds of names and family trees. Basically unreadable if you are here for a good telling of a myth.
Really interesting read, although a cumbersome read, to see the history of the USSR through the eyes of food. From deplorable times of great famine to times of plentiful, food says a lot about the condition and politics of a nation. And in this nations case; totally bonkers ... und yet one can imagine why people long back to the USSR.
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