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The Pachinko Parlour

3.6(21)
Paperback
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About the book

From The Author Of Winter In Sokcho, Which Won The 2021 National Book Award For Translated Literature. The Days Are Beginning To Draw In. The Sky Is Dark By Seven In The Evening. I Lie On The Floor And Gaze Out Of The Window. Women's Calves, Men's Shoes, Heels Trodden Down By The Weight Of Bodies Borne For Too Long. It Is Summer In Tokyo. Claire Finds Herself Dividing Her Time Between Tutoring Twelve-year-old Mieko In An Apartment In An Abandoned Hotel And Lying On The Floor At Her Grandparents: Daydreaming, Playing Tetris, And Listening To The Sounds From The Street Above. The Heat Rises; The Days Slip By. The Plan Is For Claire To Visit Korea With Her Grandparents. They Fled The Civil War There Over Fifty Years Ago, Along With Thousands Of Others, And Haven't Been Back Since. When They First Arrived In Japan, They Opened Shiny, A Pachinko Parlour. Shiny Is Still Open, Drawing People In With Its Bright, Flashing Lights And Promises Of Good Fortune. And As Mieko And Claire Gradually Bond, Their Tender Relationship Growing, Mieko's Determination To Visit The Pachinko Parlour Builds. The Pachinko Parlouris A Nuanced And Beguiling Exploration Of Identity And Otherness, Unspoken Histories, And The Loneliness You Can Feel Within A Family. Crisp And Enigmatic, Shua Dusapin's Writing Glows With Intelligence.

Editions (1)

ISBN9781922585172
PublisherScribe Publications, Carlton North
Publication Date12/31/22
Pages176

Reviews & Ratings

21 ratings

3 reviews

3.6

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  • khera1505
    khera1505

    6 Followers

    5.0

    Genauso schön melancholisch und ruhig, wie "Winter in Sokcho", es geht viel um Familie, Heimat, Herkunft und Zugehörigkeit allgemein. Sehr empfehlenswert!

    Jun 27, 2024

  • leniover
    leniover

    13 Followers

    4.0

    This was super odd yet super connecting like I’m actually sad it’s over :/

    May 31, 2026

  • blattzirkus
    blattzirkus

    34 Followers

    4.0

    This felt like a fever dream with moments of waking up from it and feeling all good and clear again before going back to sleep and having another fever dream. The moments with her grandmother having her episodes and her grandfather being what feels constantly at the Pachinko Parlour and Claire being with 10 year old Mieko who behaves very young and old at the same time was tense. The whole theme of the book felt sad and tense. It feels like Claire was stuck waiting and being paralyzed by not knowing what to do next while she knew at the same time that she wanted to go to Korea, but with her grandparents. This is the second book I‘ve read by Elisa Shua Dusapin, after Winter in Sokcho, and the writing style felt the same. Very on point, mainly short sentences and a feeling of urgency. It gave me some kind of cultural understanding, away from the polished picture of Korea and Japan.

    Dec 26, 2023

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