
The Woman Dies
Aoko Matsuda, Polly Barton
£14.99
Description
FEMINIST TALES FROM JAPAN BY THE ACCLAIMED AUTHOR OF WHERE THE WILD LADIES ARE
Piercing, inventive, and darkly humorous, the fifty-two stories in Aoko Matsuda’s The Woman Dies explore the persistent and pervasive sexism faced by women in modern-day Japan.
The normalization of violence against women on screen and in the media is confronted in the story ‘The Woman Dies’, while others invest inanimate objects with their own perspectives, examine the aesthetics of technology, and use clever wordplay to riff off the absurdity of contemporary life.
Masterfully translated by Polly Barton, the translator of Asako Yuzuki’s Butter, The Woman Dies is more than a simple thrill ride. Blending humour, surrealism, and sharp social critique, it’s a vast, multifaceted theme park of ideas by one of Japan’s most exciting writers.
Praise for Where the Wild Ladies Are, a Time magazine Best Book of 2022
“Delightfully uncanny… Matsuda’s retellings are feminist with a vengeance.”
-New York Times Book Review
“Funny, beautiful, surreal and relatable, this is a phenomenal book.”
-The Guardian
“Softly electrifying.”
-The Atlantic
“Delightful, sharp, poignant.”
-Literary Hub
Publisher Review
“A wickedly entertaining collection, bold and confident, full of smart insights that fully reflect women’s lives. Aoko Matsuda has a fantastic handle on her form – these stories are short, dazzling, intense, provoking admiration and awe, very fresh and contemporary. Each one snaps and sparkles with humour and cunning.” * Bidisha, author of The Future of Serious Art * “Matsuda shines with her distinctive imagery and focused commentary. Readers will find plenty to enjoy.” * Publishers Weekly * Praise for Where the Wild Ladies Are
“Funny, beautiful, surreal and relatable, this is a phenomenal book.”-The Guardian
“Delightfully uncanny.”-New York Times
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