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Book Review: Under the Eye of the Big Bird - Hiromi Kawakami

· 2 comments · 200 words


Book cover of a stylised bird.

This is an intriguing and mostly satisfying sci-fi tale. It has shades of Oryx Crake mixed in with A Canticle for Leibowitz - we are mere observers of the tattered remains of humanity. Watchers guide scattered settlements as they strive to evolve and understand their place on a corrupted Earth.

The writing is dreamy and hazy - reminiscent of Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go. It isn't immediately clear what's happening; the story is drip-fed to us. Unfortunately it is rather undone by the penultimate chapter which is a great-big data-dump of exposition.

If you've ever seen the show Don't Hug Me I'm Scared you'll be well at home with the surreal and oblique nature of the storytelling presented here. The language is obtuse and confusing, reflecting the confusion these new humans feel.

I think part of the story is a rejection of the hierarchy and artificial inter-personal structures often seen in societies like Japan. Everyone is simultaneously desperate to escape their confines while rigidly enforcing the status quo - with predictably disastrous results.

It is a meandering tale, spanning eons, which ultimately feels a bit depressing.

Verdict
Great
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2 thoughts on “Book Review: Under the Eye of the Big Bird - Hiromi Kawakami”

  1. You may have read it already, but your description of the writing style here reminded me of This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone. It's a short read, but I enjoyed the "drip feed exposition" similarly.

    Reply

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