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Posts Tagged ‘Junji Ito’

It is that time of the year when we share the list of our favourite books. I normally wait till the beginning of the new year to share this list. But this time, I feel that I’m not going to finish the current book I’m reading and so I thought it is a good time to make this list.

This year was not a great reading year for me, in terms of number of books. I had a three-month reading slump during the first half of the year, and a two-month reading slump during the second half, and with this, half my reading year was gone. But in terms of spectacular books, I read many.

I read 34 books, out of which 18 were fiction and 15 were nonfiction and one defied classification. I read 20 books by male writers and 14 books by female writers. I read 18 books which were written originally in English, 14 books which were translated, and 2 books in their original language which was not English.

So, here is the list of my favourites.

(1) Temple Alley Summer by Sachiko Kashiwaba – I thought this was a manga comic when I got it, but it turned out to be a novel. I was disappointed initially, but I needn’t have, because it was spectacular. It has Japanese culture, history, ghosts and strange happenings embedded inside and it is beautiful.

(2) The Three-Cornered World by Natsume Sōseki – This year I read three books by Natsume Sōseki. This is the first time I read novels by him, and as soon as I read my first book by him, he zoomed past Yukio Mishima and became my all-time favourite Japanese writer. I loved all the three books of his I read (the other two were ‘Kokoro’ and ‘Botchan’) but ‘The Three-Cornered World’ (also called ‘Kusamakura’) is my favourite. It is incredibly beautiful. Pages and pages of beauty. It was an absolute pleasure to read. I think it is one of my all-time favourites. Hoping to read more by Sōseki-San during the coming year.

(3) Tomie by Junji Ito – This is my first Junji Ito book. Beautiful artwork, extremely scary story. A book which shouldn’t be read in the night, in the dark. It will give you nightmares.

(4) A Testament of Hope : The Essential Writings and Speeches by Martin Luther King Jr. – I wanted to read a Martin Luther King book and finally got to read this one. It was amazing, beautiful, inspiring! It was not just a collection of speeches, it was also in some way the history of the Civil Rights era. Most of us know some of MLK’s famous lines, especially, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.” But we wouldn’t have read a complete speech or essay by him. This book has those amazing quotes, and it has those wonderful, inspiring speeches. As the old saying goes, if you want to read just one book by MLK, this is that one. This is probably my book of the year.

(5) Black Foam by Haji Jabir – The author is Eritrean, the book is written in Arabic, and the story happens in three places, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Israel – all these together made it a very unusual and fascinating book. The writing is beautiful and the story is moving and insightful.

(6) Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson – My second book by Jacqueline Woodson. This one is a memoir in verse. Very beautiful. Hoping to read more Woodson.

(7) Iravu Chudar (Night Flame) by R.Chudamani – I read a big collection of short stories by Chudamani last year. It was exceptional. Chudamani is a short story specialist. But she has also written a few slim novellas. This is the most famous of them. It is about how being your own person is very hard when your family and people around you are different. It is a beautiful and heartbreaking story.

(8) Karukku by Bama – Karukku is Bama’s memoir. Bama is a Dalit writer and this book describes her life as a Dalit Christian since the time she was a kid. It is beautiful, eye-opening and heartbreaking. This is a book which satisfies the traditional definition of a classic – often recommended but rarely read. It deserves more readers.

(9) Diary of an Invasion by Andrey Kurkov – This is my most recent Andrey Kurkov book. Have loved all his books that I’ve read till now. This one is probably his finest. It is about the recent Russian invasion of Ukraine and how it has impacted normal Ukrainians.

(10) Siberian Haiku by Jurga Vilė and Lina Itagaki – My first Lithuanian book which is also a graphic novel. It is about innocent Lithuanians who were deported and forced to work in Gulags in the middle of nowhere during the Soviet era. The story is moving and the artwork is incredibly beautiful.

(11) My Heart by Semezdin Mehmedinović – I read two books by Mehmedinović this year. The first one, ‘Sarajevo Blues’, is his most famous book. But this one, ‘My Heart’, is my favourite. Mehmedinović’s writing is incredibly beautiful and this book is an absolute pleasure to read.

(12) Artificial Intelligence : A Guide for Thinking Humans by Melanie Mitchell – Once in a while we stumble upon an amazing science book by accident. This is that book for me this year. Melanie Mitchell takes the complex concepts of Artificial Intelligence and makes them accessible and easy-to-understand for us. Clearly she is a great teacher. Her students are very lucky. I want to read everything that she has written for the general reader.

(13) Madam, Will You Talk? by Mary Stewart – I finally got to read my first Mary Stewart. This is her first book. The writing is beautiful, the heroine is charming, the story is gripping. What else do we need? I read one more book by her after this. Hoping to read more by her soon.

(14) The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Ilan Pappé – I read a couple of books on Palestine and Israel. It is hard to pick a favourite between them, but I decided on this one. This is moving and heartbreaking. Not to be attempted when you are feeling vulnerable. But an important book which is especially relevant for our current times.

Have you read any of these? Which are your favourite books from this year?

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I’ve wanted to read a Junji Ito book for a while. So finally decided to read ‘Tomie‘ which was his first book.

High school students go on a hike up the mountain, as part of a class trip. One of them goes missing. Her name is Tomie. It is later discovered that she is dead, brutally murdered. No one knows who killed her. After her funeral, the students go back to class. Their teacher tells them that they have to be careful as the murderer hasn’t been caught yet. At that point, there is a knock on the door. Everyone looks at the class entrance, and who do they find? It is Tomie! She’s alive and kicking and acts as if nothing has happened! Some classmates feel that the dead person must be a different person and it was a case of mistaken identity. But other classmates seem to know something that we, the readers, don’t. They are sure that the real Tomie is dead. So according to them, there can be only two explanations. One is that the new Tomie is an impostor. The second is that Tomie has come back from the dead. The first explanation is simple and logical. It will probably lead to an old-fashioned revenge thriller. The second explanation is scary and offers delightful possibilities in the telling of the story. Junji Ito being the smart guy, chooses the second one. And we have this beautiful, scary, delightful 750+ page horror manga book.

There are 20 stories in the book. Some of them continue from where the previous story left off. Some of them tell new stories with the characters which appeared before. There are other stories which are independent, and which can be read as standalones. I loved stories from each of these categories, but I loved the standalones more. In some stories, Tomie does bad things or makes people around her do bad things. In other stories, Tomie is the victim and she suffers at the hand of others, and later she comes back to haunt her oppressors and take revenge. I liked the second kind of stories more. There were a few stories which were neither, which was very unusual in a horror book. Some of the third type of stories were very beautiful. Many of the stories were predictable in terms of plot, and relied on the horror aspect to create dramatic effect. Some of them were unusual and surprising though. Some stories seemed to be a nod to other famous horror stories and fairytales.

I enjoyed reading most of the stories in the book, but I loved some more than others. One of my favourites was ‘Little Finger‘. In this story, a few brothers do bad things (won’t tell you more) and call their youngest brother to clean things up. This youngest brother is very ugly. While he is cleaning up his brothers’ nasty deeds, the law comes after him, and he ends up living in a cave. Strange things happen in the cave, and five ghostly women rise from there. Four of them are pretty and one of them is ugly. The pretty ones taunt and torture the ugly one. When this youngest brother sees that, he fights for the ugly one and defends her. This woman falls in love with him. She is a strange being though, and she is not human. What happens after that is told in the rest of the story. It is a very unusual love story. It makes us think of ‘Beauty and the Beast‘.

In another of my favourite stories, ‘Boy‘, a boy is wandering in the beach, when he finds a cave. Inside the cave is a young woman who is in bad shape. The boy brings food and clothes for her and the woman recovers. She treats the boy like her own son and the boy treats her like his mom. But the boy has his own real mother. And this new mother is unusual and may not even be human…

I’ll write about one more favourite story. It is called ‘Waterfall Basin‘. In this story, a travelling salesman comes to a village. He sells a strange package and says that it will bring people happiness. People refuse to buy anything from him. Then, one villager relents, and buys a small package from him. And, of course, only one thing can happen after that. All hell breaks loose. This story made me think of Stephen King’sNeedful Things‘, which has a very similar overall plot, though both these stories are very different in details.

The artwork in the book is very interesting – it changes in style depending on the way the mood of the story changes. When the plot moves, the artwork is simple and straightforward. But when the situation gets intense, and scary things start happening, the artwork is intricate and detailed and is beautiful and also gives us nightmares at the same time. Have shared some of the pages from the book, below. Have avoided the more scarier ones.

From the story ‘Moromi‘ – Part 1
From the story ‘Moromi‘ – Part 2

I enjoyed reading ‘Tomie’. I loved the stories in which Tomie is the good person and suffers at the hand of bad guys and later comes back to haunt them. Of course, these stories are not as simple as I’ve described them, but I loved them. I don’t think I’d have loved this book as much, if I had read it when I was younger. I remember reading Charles Burns’Black Hole‘ many years back. It was too dark for me and gave me nightmares and I never went near his books again. ‘Tomie’ is ten times more darker and more scarier. Being older and wiser now (or maybe the mind has become numb, after watching series like ‘Game of Thrones’), I could resist the impact of the violent scenes, and appreciate the beautiful scenes. Luckily, the last few days, while I was reading the book, I didn’t get any nightmares. It would have been scary to hear Tomie’s whisper in my dreams and then feel someone prodding me, and then get up in the middle of the night to see Tomie sitting next to me laughing in a nasty way. Doesn’t mean that it won’t happen tonight and Tomie won’t step out from the pages of the book into the real world. But I hope and pray it doesn’t happen. Please pray for me.

I read in Junji Ito’s afterword to the book that he used to work in a dentist’s office during the day, and work on ‘Tomie’ during the night. It is interesting to contemplate on – that he was a regular guy with a regular job, but when the sun set and he came home in the evening, he dreamt of terrifying fantasies and put them in this book to scare us. Life is always surprising!

Junji Ito is one of the legends of horror manga. There are two more famous books of his – ‘Uzumaki‘ and ‘Gyo‘. I’ve heard Junji Ito fans saying that ‘Uzumaki’ is their favourite. I’m hoping to read that, the next time I feel brave enough.

This book is not for everyone. If you are not a horror fan and you find these things scary and they give you nightmares, please stay away from this book. But if you are a horror fan, this is 750 pages of pure pleasure. Go read it now.

Have you read ‘Tomie’? What do you think about it? Which is your favourite Junji Ito book?

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