Vibrator
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Average customer review:Product Description
Following a chance encounter with a truck driver one night, Rei Hayakawa, a troubled young journalist, embarks on a journey through the snowy wastelands of northern Japan. Together the unlikely pair explore their sexuality and their demons, and the memories that compel them to keep moving. Powerful and highly original, "Vibrator" is a novel that drives at the broken heart of a lost generation.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #475766 in Books
- Published on: 2006-03-16
- Original language: Japanese
- Binding: Paperback
- 144 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"'Intense and truly poignant. Akasaka reveals a true affinity with the female condition in our consumer, image - driven culture.' i-D 'Disturbing and original.' Esquire"
Customer Reviews
Though "Vibrator" is originally a Japanese novel,
it seems an English one. I read this work in Japanese six years ago. The wording is far from ordinary Japanese. In fact, the author Mari Akasaka, late thirties, has supent her adolescence in the United States, so she commands English. We can find many English-nesses in the work.
In the kingdom of the novel, a kind of white noise as "vibrations" which visually and tactilly other than aurally attacks the chasracters such as Rei Hayakawa and the teamster. Rei is a freelance journalist, who is nearly always surrounded with several kinds of "vibrations" that causes stresses in the society. One day, she cannot help controling her desire to escape from such noises. At the same time, the road jockey picks her in his truck. She feels at home with him in his motorlorry because it gives her other "vibrations" which causes ease for her.
They travel from Tokyo to Niigata, where is located on the coast of the Japan sea. Through the journey, they experience many types of "vibrations."
My native tongue is Japanese, so I can't give you a good explanation on "Vibrator." I admit this. But, This Mari Akasaka's book will never let you down. Buy and read or, you will surely regret.
Failed to turn me on
Vibrator's bold cover is both confrontational and suggestive; unfortunately what lies inside is cheap titillation dressed-up as challenging prose. Later made into a (apparently!) tawdry and frankly appalling film, this is one to miss.
"dirty realism" and "fairy tale" in one book?
There is a myth that truckers in Japan can pick up girls at their stops - which might sound like fun until you try to think of it from the girls point of view - surely they would either have to be pretty desperate to get somewhere, simply desperate, or slightly out of their minds!
In the case of this story, the latter is true. On the surface Rei is an intelligent, functioning freelance journalist, underneath she hears voices, has an eating disorder, has abused alcohol and drugs, and the vibrations are something which also happens in her head. (Sorry to disappoint, but there is no 'vibrator!') So her story is disturbing for a lot longer than it is sexy! There is an effort to reach out: "I want to touch someone," but to me the road trip is more a form of escapism. In fact the whole book is an invitation for the readers to escape their daily hum-drum routines. The way the driver copes with the girl coming to pieces confirms to me an element of fantasy overcoming the "dirty realism."
The settings and sensibilities are Japanese - there is exposure to troubled Japanese youth who fail to cope with modern pressures and expectations. (Don't be fooled - in reality most cope pretty well, and books like this are part of the release.) That said, I don't think there is anything that would confuse a Western audience.... more sad than shocking.
There seems a rash of new writers from Japan - well marketed and presented, enticing and exciting - are they more than mild porn? I guess this is only an extension of the tradition in Japan, thinking back to authors like Ryu Murikari who must have shocked a few people in the 70's, and many of the classics, both modern and ancient, did not shy away from the subject of sex.
Is it any good? Would you want this girl in the cab of your lorry? For me the writing is fine and I have no problem with the contents.... but in the end I'm going to mark it down because it does not add up to more than the sum of its parts. A glossy magazine type book. But by all means, give it a go....!




