Thursday, June 25, 2020

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Original Title: The Love We Share Without Knowing
ISBN: 055338564X (ISBN13: 9780553385649)
Edition Language: English
Setting: Japan
Literary Awards: Nebula Award Nominee for Best Novel (2009), Locus Award Nominee for Best Fantasy Novel (2009), James Tiptree Jr. Award Honor List (2008)
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The Love We Share Without Knowing Paperback | Pages: 304 pages
Rating: 3.96 | 553 Users | 100 Reviews

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Title:The Love We Share Without Knowing
Author:Christopher Barzak
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 304 pages
Published:November 25th 2008 by Bantam (first published January 1st 2008)
Categories:Fiction. Fantasy. Cultural. Japan. Short Stories. Magical Realism. Asian Literature. Japanese Literature

Explanation To Books The Love We Share Without Knowing

On a train filled with quietly sleeping passengers, a young man’s life is forever altered when he is miraculously seen by a blind man. In a quiet town an American teacher who has lost her Japanese lover to death begins to lose her own self. On a remote road amid fallow rice fields, four young friends carefully take their own lives—and in that moment they become almost as one. In a small village a disaffected American teenager stranded in a strange land discovers compassion after an encounter with an enigmatic red fox, and in Tokyo a girl named Love learns the deepest lessons about its true meaning from a coma patient lost in dreams of an affair gone wrong.

Rating Epithetical Books The Love We Share Without Knowing
Ratings: 3.96 From 553 Users | 100 Reviews

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5 star title! Backed up by a good read. Very much enjoyed many of the intertwined stories in this novel (is it really one?). Some magical realism and a Japanese setting make the comparison to murakami obvious though this stands on its own.

5 star title! Backed up by a good read. Very much enjoyed many of the intertwined stories in this novel (is it really one?). Some magical realism and a Japanese setting make the comparison to murakami obvious though this stands on its own.

I really loved these stories- they were engrossing and and absorbing. I wanted to know more, to be there and that's the best kind of feeling you can get from a book. Interwoven stories can be tricky but this was beautifully written.

A book written with such poetry and life almost like each chapter had it's own separate heartbeat. It grew louder and louder begging to be heard. By the end of the book each beat that was separated once now beat in unison so loud it can be heard long after you turn the last page.

This book is a life changer. I couldn't put it down. I loved the feelings that it evoked in me during all of the different stories. My heart broke at times for the love and loss and the missed moments. This book is really a great read, it made me want to travel to Japan. Christopher has done it again with a great story that felt so real with his details of the environment. Thank you!!!

This book is hauntingly, achingly beautiful. So much of the fantasy genre is dedicated to escapism, but this book doesn't make me want to escape. It makes me want to run out and hop on a plane to halfway around the word so I can kiss a stranger in a city I've never been to before. It makes me want to embrace life in all its wonderful and terrible ways.

the first story got me excited for some uber-depressing interwoven tales... alas, it was a short-lived excitement (and that wasn't meant as a pun about the suicides of young people)... not quite sure what happened, but maybe all the "gawd, is this book depressing!" reviews got me thinking it would be pages of awfully good awfulness... nah, just run-of-the-mill boredom... not enough depth, or too much effort on connecting the tales, maybe? smatterings of culture shock and culture ennui and

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