See: loss. see also: love A novel

Yukiko Tominaga

Book - 2024

"A tender, slyly comical, and shamelessly honest debut novel following a Japanese widow raising her son between worlds with the help of her Jewish mother-in-law, as she wrestles with grief, loss, and-strangest of all, joy. Shortly after her husband Levi's untimely death, Kyoko decides to raise their young son, Alex, in San Francisco, rather than return to Japan. Her nosy yet loving Jewish mother-in-law, Bubbe, encourages her to find new love and abandon frugality but her own mother wants Kyoko to celebrate her now husbandless life. Always beside her is Alex, who lives confidently, no matter the circumstance. Four sections of vignettes reflect Kyoko's fluctuating emotional states-sometimes ugly, other times funny, but always u...niquely hers. While freshly mourning Levi, Kyoko and Alex confront another death-that of Alex's pet betta fish. Kyoko and Bubbe take a road trip to a psychic and discover that Kyoko carries bad karma. On visits back to Japan, Kyoko and her mother clash over how best to connect Alex with his Japanese heritage, and as Alex enters his teenage years and brings his first girlfriend home, Kyoko lets her imagination run wild as she worries about teen pregnancy. In this openhearted and surprising novel about the choices and relationships that sustain us, there are times where Kyoko is lonely but never alone and others in which she is alone but never lonely. Through these moments, she learns how much more there is to herself in the wake of total and unexpected upheaval. See: Loss. See Also: Love. is a testament to how grief isn't a linear process but is a spiraling awareness of the vast range of human emotion we experience every day"--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York : Scribner 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Yukiko Tominaga (author)
Edition
First Scribner hardcover edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781668031674
9781668031681
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In this affecting debut, Kyoko has lost her husband in a sudden and unexpected accident. Four vignettes vividly paint a portrait of the stages she journeys through in her grief. Like grief itself, her pathway is by no means linear. Kyoko's emotions run the full gamut, with much darkness, rare light, and occasionally, humor. She has as many emotions as she does family members and past homes. Kyoko finds solace in her in-laws, her husband's warm and exuberant Jewish family in Boston; her sedate immediate family in Tokyo; her vibrant San Francisco community; and her wise, stalwart son, Alex. Tominaga weaves Kyoko's parenting challenges into her grief journey with her deep concern over whether she is raising Alex correctly. Through it all, Kyoko is constantly examining love: what it is, what it means, if it is even possible. Ultimately, in opening herself up to the pain of her loss, Kyoko also lets in the delight of all those around her. A penetrating look at the complexities of grief, love, and joy.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this wry debut from Tominaga, a Japanese woman navigates single parenthood after her American husband's untimely death. Kyoko is visiting her parents in Japan with her 18-month-old son, Alex, when her husband, Levi, is crushed to death in their San Francisco garage by the antique car he was working on. Kyoko had stopped working after Alex was born, and she struggles to see how she'll afford her life in San Francisco. She cuts down on her costs, finds work at a preschool, and receives emotional support from her blunt and loving mother-in-law, Bubbe. The women's relationship forms the heart of the episodic narrative, which includes a visit to a psychic who claims Levi wasn't happy with Kyoko. At one point, Kyoko suppresses the urge to tell Bubbe how little she misses Levi, thinking, "The greatest gift he gave me was the opportunity to raise Alex alone"; at another, Bubbe affectionately calls Kyoko her daughter, not her daughter-in-law. Tominaga depicts the women's tensions, misunderstandings, and affection with refreshing honesty and piercing insights ("Regret, resentment, and shame would build a wall around you, believed, and by telling the truth we would break the wall and unite"). Tominga impresses with this distinctive slice of life. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A man's death is the central event in a patchwork narrative of childhood, motherhood, and continuity as experienced by his wife. An introspective frankness flavors much of this debut, delivered as Kyoko's first-person account of her life before, during, and after the time she spent with Levi, an American who died in an accident while she and their 18-month-old son, Alex, were visiting her parents in Japan. Levi's Jewish family, Kyoko's Japanese heritage, the fabric of her marriage and its afterlife, and Alex's development over the years are the themes in chapters that loosely and not always chronologically connect events and feelings into a fictional mosaic. Several chapters have been published as short stories. The product of a not especially wealthy family, Kyoko shares various early memories including watching an anime film with graphic scenes of a nuclear bomb's impact. This wartime trauma connects to time spent under the roof of Levi's brother, Ben, a man with military connections and a different, more rigorous and responsible outlook than his laid-back sibling. Ben and Levi's mother, Bubbe, offers a sweeter, more available version of family. Her exploration of dating leads to a riff on loneliness, love, and need. For all Kyoko's grief, she is unsentimental about her marriage and experiences some satisfaction in parenting independently. Elsewhere, she stresses about money. "You're cheap, obsessive and sometimes sickly paranoid," Bubbe tells her as they argue over the cost of banana cream pie. "But it's not hard to love you." Love--of family, friends, partner, and child--crops up frequently, sometimes comically, as in a chapter that has Kyoko obsessing about a now-teenage Alex's sex life. Put together, the scenes, musings, and snapshots evoke a woman struggling with identity and connection in a manner variously arbitrary, quirky, and insightful. A modest, discursive novel offers an unusual psychology, piecemeal. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.