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Emily Itami

    Emily Itami
    Eine kurze Begegnung
    Fault Lines
    Kakigori Summer
    • Kakigori Summer

      • 336 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Rei, Kiki and Ai are three sisters divided by distance and circumstance. They have lost both parents, one way or another, and found their own ways of carrying on. Rei works for a financial corporation in London, halfway across the world from where she grew up. Back in Tokyo, Kiki is the single mother of a young son, working in a care home. Ai, the youngest, is a Japanese music idol. When Ai is embroiled in a scandal and suddenly thrust into the spotlight, Rei has to pick up the pieces of her family once more. Reuniting for the summer in their childhood home on the Japanese coast, the sisters are forced to confront the legacy of their mother's suicide, the stories they have told themselves ever since and the question of how they want to live. A transporting and redemptive novel about love and loss, this new novel from the author of Fault Lines confirms Emily Itami as a talent to watch.

      Kakigori Summer
      4.3
    • Shortlisted for the Costa First Novel Award 'The perfect marriage of Sally Rooney and early Murakami' Kathy Wang, author of Impostor Syndrome 'A brilliant modern love story . . . atmospheric and transporting but also wise, clever and universal in its exploration of love, family and identity. I loved it' Cathy Rentzenbrink Mizuki is a Japanese housewife. She has a hardworking husband, two adorable children and a beautiful Tokyo apartment. It's everything a woman like her could want . . . isn't it? One rainy night, she meets Kiyoshi. In him, she rediscovers freedom, friendship, a voice, and the neon, electric pulse of the city she has always loved. But the further she falls into their relationship, the clearer it becomes that she is living two lives - and in the end, we can choose only one.

      Fault Lines
      3.7
    • Mizuki hat alles, das perfekte Leben: Zwei gelungene und geliebte Kinder, einen erfolgreichen Ehemann, ein schönes Apartment in Tokio. Ihre Karriereträume hat sie aufgegeben, um das Leben einer guten Hausfrau und Mutter zu führen. Was darin nicht vorgesehen war: Der Ehemann ignoriert sie, die Kinder gleichen manchmal kleinen Psychopathen und die größtmögliche Freiheit ist ein Abend mit Freundinnen. Erst in der Begegnung mit einem inspirierenden, charmanten jungen Mann entdeckt sie gleichberechtigte Freundschaft, ihre Freiheit und ihre Stimme wieder. Mizuki hat nur ein Leben und muss sich doch zwischen zwei entscheiden – zwischen familiärer Verantwortung und den eigenen Bedürfnissen.

      Eine kurze Begegnung
      4.5