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The Night Parade: a speculative memoir by Jami Nakamura Lin 9781914484070

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Description

In the groundbreaking tradition of In the Dream House and The Collected Schizophrenias, a gorgeously illustrated lyrical memoir that draws upon the Japanese myth of the Hyakki Yagyo - the Night Parade of One Hundred Demons - to shift the cultural narrative around mental illness, grief, and remembrance.

Are these the only two stories? The one where you defeat your monster, and the other where you succumb to it?

Jami Nakamura Lin spent much of her life feeling monstrous for reasons outside of her control. As a Japanese Taiwanese American woman with undiagnosed bipolar disorder, her adolescence was marked by periods of extreme rage and self-medicating, an ever-evolving array of psychiatric treatments, and her relationships with those she loved - especially her father - suffered as a result.

Frustrated with the tidy arc of the typical mental illness memoir, the kind whose trajectory leads toward being 'better', Lin sought comfort in the Japanese folklore she'd loved as a child, tales of supernatural creatures known to terrify in the night. Through the lens of the yokai and other East Asian mythology, she set out to interrogate the Western notion of conflict and resolution, grief, loss, mental illness, and the myriad ways fear of difference shapes who we are as a people.

Divided into four acts in the traditional Japanese narrative structure and featuring stunning watercolour illustrations, Jami Nakamura Lin has crafted an innovative, genre-bending, and deeply emotional memoir that mirrors the sensation of being caught between worlds. Braiding her experience of mental illness, the death of her father, and other haunted topics with the folkloric tradition, The Night Parade shines a light into dark corners in search of a new way, driven by the question: How do we learn to live with the things that haunt us?



About the Author
Jami Nakamura Lin is a Japanese Taiwanese Okinawan American author based outside Chicago. She is a former Catapult essay columnist, and her work has appeared in The New York Times, Electric Literature, Passages North, and other publications. She is a 2022 Sustainable Arts Foundation finalist and her work was shortlisted for the 2021 Chicago Review of Books Awards. She received her MFA in nonfiction from the Pennsylvania State University. https://jaminakamuralin.com/the-night-parade/ Cori Nakamura Lin is a Japanese Taiwanese American illustrator and designer specialising in culture-centered storytelling and radical information sharing. Her work has been published in the LA Times, Eater Chicago, WBEZ Curious City Chicago, PBS Learning Media, the Twin Cities Daily Planet, and has been featured on the History Channel.

Reviews

'At once a medical memoir ... and a reflection on mythology - the personal, the collective, the inherited - The Night Parade moves with courage ... Jami Nakamura Lin's speculative memoir is a feat of storytelling; one that I found deeply moving.'

-- Katie Goh

'The Night Parade is a stunning excavation of personal and collective histories, filled with the endless alchemy of storytelling. Jami Nakamura Lin writes with meditative precision and expansive empathy, challenging and reaffirming what communal stories can make possible. Exploring the many worlds that flourish beyond certain knowledge, this boundary-blurring memoir finds power in the undefinable. It reveals to us that the fracturing of a story can be beautifully fruitful. Teeming with language that is transformative and fully embodied, and gorgeously illustrated by Cori Nakamura Lin, The Night Parade is a generous and abundant feast for our living and our dead, our salvaged lineages, and our continuing stories.'

-- K-Ming Chang, award-winning author of Bestiary

'Jami Nakamura Lin has reinvented the genre of memoir, weaving an intricate braid of fable, memory, art, cultural legacy, and legend into a gorgeous tapestry of the stories that made her. The haunting illustrations by her sister, Cori Nakamura Lin, are a potent reminder that no one is self-authored. We all collaborate to become ourselves. Serpentine, polyphonic, and stunningly textured, The Night Parade positively pulses with life.'

-- Alex Marzano-Lesnevich, award-winning author of The Fact of A Body

'A gorgeous invocation of the magic-haunted spaces between lived experience and folkloric traditions, between the living and the dead, between memory and story. I loved The Night Parade.'

-- Kelly Link, bestselling author of Get in Trouble

'Beautifully written and imaginative, The Night Parade takes speculative nonfiction to new heights. Jami Nakamura Lin is both poet and storyteller, mystic and philosopher, teaching us to see the world differently, to suspend our disbelief, using mythology to interrogate our notions of family, grief, fear, love, and belonging. There is no other book like this - it's truly a stunning and visionary work of art.'

-- Jaquira Diaz, author of Ordinary Girls: a memoir

'Genre-defying and deeply poetic, The Night Parade invites the pandemonium within the personal and mythic to a round table where ancestors and folkloric creatures transform grief, memory, and mental illness into the tangible. Ancient tales and horrific spectres braid throughout Jami Nakamura Lin's life, but will worm your way under your skin, prompting the question: what do we cut out from our lives and histories and what do we let grow with us? Impossible to put down, gut-wrenching, and magical. I cannot think of a writer who has written so personally while acknowledging ancestral and cultural grief with such grace and honesty. A crucial and groundbreaking entry for the literature of the Asian Diaspora and explorations of mental illness.'

-- Sequoia Nagamatsu, author of How High We Go in the Dark

'The Night Parade is stunning - it is haunting and magical and terrifying at once. Deeply intimate, but with a sense of scope that transcends history and genre, I loved stepping into this dream of a memoir, of a shared experience.'

-- Catherine Cho, author of Inferno

'With abundant honesty and tenderness, Jami Nakamura Lin wraps her story in the expansive frameworks of folklore and the mystical, bringing in centuries of storytelling about love and loss, death, illness, and mystery. A moving and notable memoir.'

-- Aimee Bender, New York Times bestselling author of The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake

'In this gorgeous and unique debut memoir, Lin draws on the Japanese myth of the Hyakki Yagyo (the "Night Parade of One Hundred Demons", in which demons and spirits march through the streets at night) to document her struggles with bipolar disorder and her father's fatal illness ... Throughout, Lin draws on characters from the Hyakki Yagyo (like the hideous, flesh-eating Oni Baba, or the vengeful ghost whale known as Bakekujira) to contextualise and come to terms with her feelings, sometimes using them to personify her "ugly" emotions, other times using them to interrogate cultural narratives about monstrousness. Interspersed throughout are full-colour illustrations of each creature by her sister, Cori ... The result is a memorable and moving exorcism of the monsters within.'

-- Publishers Weekly, starred review

'Lin uses mythology from her Taiwanese and Japanese heritage to make sense of mental illness, cancer, and pregnancy loss ... Throughout this inventive narrative, Lin takes calculated literary risks, ranging from the use of epistolary forms to experiments with point of view. These risks pay off mightily, coming together in a vulnerable, insightful, and refreshingly original meditation on survival, illness, and grief. A stunning memoir about the stories that make us who we are.'

-- Kirkus Reviews, starred review

'In this debut speculative memoir, Lin isn't afraid of her demons. Diagnosed with bipolar disorder as a teenager, Lin struggled to manage her illness while caring for her cancer-stricken father. Unhappy with the rose-coloured narratives about recovering from mental illness, she takes a different approach here, leaning into the darkness. Inspired by Japanese, Taiwanese, and Okinawan ghost stories, Lin blends memoir and horror - plus stunning illustrations - to consider what it means to co-exist with anguish.'

* The Millions *

'Highly innovative ... Using Japanese, Chinese, and Taiwanese folklore to enrich her story, the author (who is a Japanese Taiwanese Okinawan American) delves into her own powerful feelings of rage, despair, loss, and hurt, ultimately emerging from each experience stronger and with more insight into not only herself but also her complex family history. With compelling prose, this title weaves folktales about frightening and monstrous figures into the narratives of Lin's own developing bipolar disorder, her lineage, and her father's illness. Her gorgeous writing draws readers into her gripping story, which is organized into a four-part narrative structure drawn from Japanese literary tradition. The book is richly illustrated by the author's sister, Cori Nakamura Lin. VERDICT An engrossing memoir by an extraordinary debut author.'

-- Rebecca Maugridge * Library Journal, starred review *

'Part personal narrative, part mythical taxonomy, The Night Parade intertwines Nakamura Lin's lifelong experience of bipolar disorder with figures from Japanese and Taiwanese myth, resulting in a moody, unusual, and compassionate portrait of a struggle too often reduced to cliche.'

* The Boston Globe *

'In an extraordinary exploration of life in all its stages, debut memoirist Jami Nakamura Lin turns to the monsters of Japanese and Taiwanese folklore to better understand her own mental illness, the death of her father and the birth of her child. Featuring illustrations of these fantastical beasts by the author's sister Cori Nakamura Lin, this book is an "abundant feast for our living and our dead", according to ... author K-Ming Chang.'

* San Francisco Chronicle *

'In this highly innovative memoir, Lin shares her experiences as a person with bipolar disorder as she comes of age, marries, experiences a miscarriage, loses her father to cancer, and becomes a mother ... With compelling prose, this title weaves folktales about frightening and monstrous figures into the narratives of Lin's own developing bipolar disorder, her lineage, and her father's illness. Her gorgeous writing draws readers into her gripping story, which is organised into a four-part narrative structure drawn from Japanese literary tradition. The book is richly illustrated by the author's sister, Cori Nakamura Lin. An engrossing memoir by an extraordinary debut author.'

-- Library Journal, starred review

'"In the presence of a story ... time collapses. This is why I am always telling it." So begins Lin's memoir-cum-bestiary, a narrative of discovering her bipolar disorder, the struggle to start a family, and her beloved father's death and its aftermath. Along the way, she tells stories of the yokai, the liminal, ambiguous, supernatural creatures of Japanese folk and fairy tale, in the legends of which Lin finds parallels to her family's experience of colonisation, trauma, immigration, and community. Illustrated in dreamy gouache and watercolour by Cori Nakamura Lin, the author's sister, The Night Parade explores the many ways we - humans as individuals, humans in community - use stories to make sense of our lives. When calamity strikes, as in every life it must, the tales of the yokai tell us why and how we can keep it from happening again. "To prevent disaster," Lin writes, "worship the thing that eats you." Heartfelt and thoughtful, this painfully lovely memoir will appeal to readers of Carmen Maria Machado's In the Dream House and Sabrina Imbler's How Far the Light Reaches.'

* Booklist *

'Lin's braiding of personal experience and cultural touchstones make this memoir very special.'

* Los Angeles Times *

'This genre-bending and emotionally resonant memoir offers a masterfully braided narrative of Lin's experience with mental illness, the death of her father, the grieving process, and Japanese, Taiwanese, and Okinawan legends to interrogate the very notion of recovery. The result is a deeply textured portrait of the experiences that haunt us and the ways in which we can begin to feel whole again.'

* Chicago Review of Books *

'Beautiful and bizarre ... explode[s] conventional narratives of mental illness and grief ... weaves together fable and memory, research, and family history with elegance and honesty to create a singular record of family, diaspora, art, and belonging.'

-- Kathleen Rooney * Chicago Magazine *

'Based on a traditional Japanese narrative structure, this riveting speculative memoir by Jami Nakamura Lin is accompanied by the luminous illustrations of her sister, Cori. Grappling with themes of family, neurodivergence, illness, and identity, Nakamura Lin presents a nuanced, raw, and poetic redefinition of memoir.'

* Ms. magazine *

'Before you even get to the first chapter, you'll be stunned by the beauty of this hardback, and the illustrations by the author's sister, Cori Nakamura Lin ... Lin offers remarkable insight, her academic understanding of both illness and narrative informing an unusually keen self-awareness. Her experience of mental illness defies the story we're comfortable with, and she doesn't shy away from that. Using the traditional Japanese narrative structure (four acts), she tells a different story, one that's perhaps more true and realistic, but challenging to read at times.'

* Keeping Up With The Penguins *

'Inventive ... Jami Nakamura Lin weaves together threads of memoir and Japanese and Taiwanese mythology to create a gorgeous mosaic of family, grief, illness, inheritance, and love.'

* Shondaland *

'Both heart-wrenching and heart-filling ... It's breathtaking to read the way [Jami Nakamura Lin] skillfully utilises the Hyakki Yagyo - a procession of supernatural oni and yokai in Japanese folklore and mythology - to recontextualise and reconsider narratives of grief, mental illness, and memory-making. This is a book to keep at your bedside.'

* Conde Nast Traveler *

'This is a special book. A memoir, but so much more ... an amazing read.'

-- Neale Lucas * Good Reading Magazine *

'Epic in structure, this is, as much as anything else, a simply written, often poignant examination of "the things we fear and do not understand".'

-- Steven Carroll * The Sydney Morning Herald *

'The Night Parade turns grief and mental illness into a metaphor that's captured in the collective stories of yokai - the demons, spirits, and magical apparitions of Japanese folklore. The yokai are richly illustrated in the book by Lin's sister, Cori ... The fantastical inclusions also introduce time travel, so that multiple timelines can run parallel in ways that more accurately represent the pandemonium of the neurodivergent experience ... But Lin's yokai only partly function as metaphor for her mental illness. They have just as much, or maybe more, to say about identity, intergenerational trauma and inheritance. The metaphor, like the experience of mental illness, is deeply tangled with the body, with community, with the structures that determine our fates.'

-- Sam van Zweden * Kill Your Darlings *



Book Information
ISBN 9781914484070
Author Jami Nakamura Lin
Format Hardback
Page Count 352
Imprint Scribe Publications
Publisher Scribe Publications
Dimensions(mm) 210mm * 140mm * 32mm

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