Description
In Sacred Cesium Ground, a woman from Tokyo travels to volunteer at a cattle farm known as the "Fortress of Hope," tending irradiated animals abandoned after the reactor meltdown. The farm closely resembles an actual ranch that has been widely covered in Japan, and the story's portrayal of those who stubbornly care for animals in spite of the danger speaks to the sense of futility and meaningfulness in the wake of traumatic events. Isa's Deluge depicts a family of fishermen whose crotchety patriarch draws on old tales of the floods that have plagued the region to fashion himself as the father of the tsunami. Together, the novellas present often-unheard voices of one of Japan's peripheral regions and their anger toward the government and Tokyo for mishandling and forgetting their part of the country. Kimura's command of dialect and conversational language is masterfully translated by Doug Slaymaker. Postapocalyptically surreal yet teeming with life, Kimura's stories will be a revelation for readers looking for a new perspective on the disaster's consequences for Japan and on the interrelated meanings of human and animal lives and deaths.
About the Author
Kimura Yusuke was born in 1970 in Hachinohe, Aomori Prefecture. He is the author of several acclaimed works, many of which are set in this region. These are the first of his works to be translated into English.
Doug Slaymaker is a professor of Japanese at the University of Kentucky. He is the translator, with Akiko Takenaka, of Hideo Furukawa's Horses, Horses, in the End the Light Remains Pure (Columbia, 2016).
Reviews
Sacred Cesium Ground and Isa's Deluge is a potent representation of stubborn locals and places that refuse to be forgotten, clinging to integrity and humanity in the face of disaster and apathy. Defiant and awake, Kimura's work speaks softly and carries a wallop. * Foreword Reviews (starred review) *
Two haunting novellas that are slight in length yet dense with meaning, enhancing the growing genre of post-3/11 literature in response to the catastrophic March 11, 2011, Tohoku earthquake, tsunami, and Fukushima nuclear meltdown. . . . Kimura's novellas offer a piercing portrait of the abandoned and forgotten. * Booklist *
Both novellas highlight peripheral voices in the post-3/11 period and ultimately return time and again to that tension between a "sacrificial" Tohoku and an all-powerful capital. These perspectives are those not frequently heard and challenge the widespread narrative of an ever-dominant Tokyo. * Japan Times *
Kimura Yusuke's novels are expanding the frontiers of Japanese-language literature. Literature consists of giving voice to the speechless, so novels at the frontiers often take on strange shapes. Kimura Yusuke is attentive to and gives shape to vital voices of the people and animals of northeastern Japan that few have been able to hear. His vision goes far beyond Tohoku; it captures the future of the planet. -- Hoshino Tomoyuki, author of We, the Children of Cats, winner of the Tanizaki Jun'ichiro Prize
Animals are speechless. In Sacred Cesium Ground, Kimura speaks up for them. The residents of Japan's disaster-ravaged northeastern region are voiceless. He gives them voice in Isa's Deluge. In a spirit of solidarity with the silenced and marginalized, he reexamines the logic behind Japan's modernity. The result is this volume: outrageously honest and powerfully haunting. -- Suga Keijiro, author of Transversal Journeys, winner of the Yomiuri Prize for Literature
Kimura pulls the reader into the irradiated zone where residents struggle for justice against a government that treats them as disposable as the cattle they illegally tend. Sacred Cesium Ground asks tough questions: What will happen to Japan's irradiated areas? Who is responsible for this nuclear tragedy? Slaymaker's translation brings this important novel into dialogue with nuclear fiction worldwide. -- Rachel DiNitto, University of Oregon
Isa's Deluge is at once a story of the triple disaster in northeastern Japan and of one man's search for his roots. Kimura's themes of destruction and ancestry culminate in an unforgettable, searing attack by the long marginalized against the powers that be. -- Davinder Bhowmik, University of Washington
Awards
Winner of William F. Sibley Memorial Subvention Award for Japanese Translation 2018.
Book Information
ISBN 9780231189439
Author Yusuke Kimura
Format Paperback
Page Count 176
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press