Stars: 3 out of 5
Pros: Well drawn character and well plotted story
Cons: Japanese words and dialect made it hard to get into the book
The Bottom Line:
Well plotted debut
With richly drawn character
Language barrier
Sins of the Past
For fifty years, Japanese American Mas Arai has built a life
for himself and his family in Pasadena .
Since he works as a gardener, it hasn't been a comfortable life, but they have
survived. Now he is a widower and his daughter has moved to New York . Mas is enjoying the quiet his life
has become.
All that is shattered one June afternoon. Mas enters one of
his favorite haunts, Tanaka's Lawnmower Shop, to find a stranger asking around
about Joji Haneda. The man claims to be a private investigator. Mas tells him
nothing, but the encounter shakes him to his core.
Mas hasn't had any contact with Joji in years. Now the owner
of a nursery in Ventura ,
the two men used to be friends. But that was in Hiroshima during World War II. And the two
share a secret from the dropping of the atomic bomb that Mas would prefer to stay
hidden.
Still, the encounter makes Mas start working on looking Joji
up himself. Unfortunately, he isn't the only one. A young reporter with wild
hair from Japan
is also asking around. And someone doesn't want Mas poking around any more. Why
the sudden interest in Joji?
I have heard great things about the novel. Much of the
praise is well deserved. The book paints an interesting picture of the Japanese
American sub-culture as well as life in Japan during World War II. History
buffs will certainly enjoy that aspect of the book.
While not the traditional murder and three suspects I
normally read, the book is well plotted. The story starts strongly and moves
along rapidly to its climax. Only the last few pages of wrap up drag a little.
Still this is a minor complaint.
Mas is a well drawn character. It was easy to picture this Hiroshima survivor as a
real person. While he had some obvious faults, he was still likeable. I kept
reading because I cared about what happened to him. The story is told third person
from his point of view, and the narration takes on a haunting noir quality
right from the start.
So why the three stars? Because it was almost impossible to
get into the book. The conversations were peppered with Japanese words. I could
usually figure them out from the context, but sometimes I couldn't.
Additionally, in an effort to make the dialog have an authentic dialect, the
words were often purposefully misspelled. Not only did they not help me picture
how the characters talked, but I had a very hard time following what they were
saying sometimes. Finally, the characters names were foreign. While this seems
obvious, several of the characters names were so similar I had a hard time
keeping them straight. I realize this last one is more my problem then the
authors, still all three of these kept me from getting truly engrossed in the
tale. Instead of inviting me into a culture I know nothing about, they served
to make me feel like an outsider. Honestly, I almost put the book down at one
point.
I'm glad I persisted. Summer of the Big Bachi has an interesting tale with
believable characters worth reading about. The flaws are strong enough to make
me only give it a hesitant recommendation, however.
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