At the Edge of the Woods

by Masatsugu Ono

Other authorsJuliet Winters Carpenter (Translator)
Paperback, 2022

Description

"Balances wonder and disquiet with incomparable grace and precision...Ono continues to captivate." --Bryan Washington, author of Memorial In an unnamed foreign country, a family of three is settling into a house at the edge of the woods. But something is off. A sound, at first like coughing and then like laughter, emanates from the nearby forest. Fantastical creatures, it is said, live out there in a castle where feudal lords reigned and Resistance fighters fell. When the mother, fearing another miscarriage, returns to her family's home to give birth to a second child, father and son are left to their own devices in rural isolation. Haunted by the ever-present woods, they look on as the TV flashes with floods and processions of refugees. The boy brings a mysterious half-naked old woman home, but before the father can make sense of her presence, she disappears. A mail carrier with gnashing teeth visits to deliver nothing but gossip of violence. A tree stump in the yard refuses to die, no matter how generously the poison is applied. An allegory for alienation and climate catastrophe unlike any other, At the Edge of the Woods is a psychological tale where myth and fantasy are not the dominion of childhood innocence but the poison fruit borne of the paranoia and violence of contemporary life.… (more)

Publication

Two Lines Press (2022), 184 pages

Media reviews

No single disaster drives these refugees. Violence. Climate change. Other people’s greed. At the Edge of the Woods puts these realities of the contemporary world on full display and presents them as what they are—horrors. It reads like a horror novel or a supernatural thriller because it
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plunges the reader into her own helplessness in the face of the mass suffering of other people.
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Forward
A chill permeates the book, in which the lines between reality and illusion are blurred. Television news programs report floods and endless lines of refugees; the lines also appear on nearby roads, or seem to.... The novel emphasizes atmosphere and incidents over plot, implying that the pleasures
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of narrative resolution are out of reach. Occasional flashbacks fill in the family’s history, but offer no explanation of their predicament. Written in startling, imaginative vignettes, At the Edge of the Woods is an evocative, terrifying story about a family’s efforts to survive a crisis.
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Kirkus Reviews
Ono's prose, elegantly translated by Carpenter, is deceptively simple. Her references range from Darwin to Mozart. But while the marketing copy helpfully explains that this a novel about "climate catastrophe," it's difficult to know what, in the end, to make of it... Beautifully written but
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puzzling to the point of opacity.
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User reviews

LibraryThing member kewing
Surrealism intends to disrupt our experience of the rational world, to inflect our perception and consciousness with with dreams, nightmare, and myth. In this slim volume, Ono relentlessly pushes extraordinary prose that assaults our senses, our perceptions, our humanity. This is a beautifully
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written series of experiences -- it's difficult to call it a novel -- where often it is impossible to tell what is going on. Is it post-apocalyptic brought on by climate change and near social collapse? Perhaps. Has the wife left or died? Perhaps. Will she return? Who knows. Is the son alive or a ghost? I believe he's alive, but with a altered perception of reality and an empathy for the dispossessed. Is the father so possessed by loss that he perceives the woods much as a child might, as dark and anthropomorphic and haunting? Most likely. But at what level of loss -- his wife? his past? his son?
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Language

Original language

Japanese

Physical description

184 p.; 8 inches

ISBN

1949641287 / 9781949641288
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