My Name Is Sei Shonagon Author:Jan Blensdorf In a small incense shop in modern Tokyo, amid the manic consumerism of cartoon-colored Shibuya youth culture, incense is still made in the ancient way -- slowly ground by hand and matured over time. Above the shop, a young woman sits behind a painted screen, listening to men unburden themselves about their work-dominated lives. She calls herself... more » "Sei Shonagon," after the eleventh-century woman who wrote The Pillow Book.
This exquisite first novel is a Pillow Book for the twenty-first century; its "Sei" is a young woman who, as a child, moved to Japan from America to live with her strict, tradition-obsessed uncle after the death of her parents, an American academic and a Japanese student. As the novel opens, "Sei," now a young woman, lies in a hospital bed, hearing sounds around her, unable to speak except silently to herself -- "I don't even know if you are still alive . . . I'm going to talk to you anyway, tell you everything I remember." Thus her story unfolds, back to a dark past and toward an unimaginable fate.« less
REading this book reminds me of walking through ankle-deep mud, and it's about as enjoyable. The best thing I can say is that the flaps on the dust jacket are ideal as page markers. I hope the next reader gets more enjoyment from it than I did.