Reviews: Books: Gold Rush by Miri Yu

February 21st, 2008 | Foxes

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Title: Gold Rush (ゴールドラッシュ)
Author: Miri Yu
Year: 1998
Plot Summary: 14-year old Kazuki is disturbed by his surroundings, growing up in the depraved town of Kogane-cho, which is filled with prostitutes, gang members, and people stuck in this place of moral decay. The novel follows the unraveling of Kazuki’s mind as he struggles in an ambiguous place between child- and adulthood.

My thoughts: Using excessive violence as an outlet to right what is wrong in Kazuki’s mind, this novel is disturbingly real and graphic in depictions of gore. I don’t know which is more unsettling–the horrifyingly detailed descriptions of Kazuki’s violent outbursts, or that the thought process that follows the outbursts is often logical and almost understandable.

This novel plays out not unlike a Murakami Ryu book, whose stories are often uncomfortable to read and interchanges between surreal events and reality. Kazuki is obviously disturbed, having to grow up in a house with domestic violence and in a town where he has no adult role model, where his group of friends gang rape and do drugs, and his older sister Miho sells sex to older men. The irony in his criticism of the immorality of his hometown and the depravity of his actions he takes to rectify the wrongs is pointed out over and over again.

Since this novel was inspired by a real-life event of a student murdering another student, I am going to take a stab and guess that Miri Yu is trying to make readers question the line drawn between child and adulthood. Kazuki is constantly being oppressed by his young age, no matter how gruesome the acts he commits, and never taken seriously by the adult figures in his life, who only try to take advantage of him as the heir to a large pachinko parlor. Kazuki’s older mentally handicapped brother, Kouki, is the only figure truly innocent in the book, who can perhaps represent childlike actions and wonder that Kazuki knows nothing of, despite being the younger brother.

Despite the intensity of the novel, I think Miri Yu hit home all the points she aimed to make in regards to children growing up too fast. There were many parts in this novel that made me lose all appetite, sometimes even feeling nauseous (if you want a clue, one such scene involves a golf-club and show dog.) But overall I think it sought to perturb readers, and not many novels can get you feeling quite as perturbed as Gold Rush.

I recommend this book for those interested in social issues with a stomach for hyper violence. Definitely not recommended for those who enjoy light reading.

Excerpt:

He stood on the bed and looked around the room, inspecting it carefully for any sign. Then he closed his eyes and wished that none of it had ever happened. When he slowly opened them again, his eyes fell on the center of the Persian rug where the pattern seemed to be wriggling like a knot of snakes. As he watched, the rug seemed to bulge from the floor, buoyed up by the stench of death rising beneath it. Shaking the vision from his head, Kazuki thought of filling the vault with concrete and covering it with a wood floor; but, realizing that would involve having workers in the basement, her gave up on the idea. He got down on his hands and knees like a dog and crawled around sniffing at the rug. A horrible stench–blood or vomit, he couldn’t be sure which–made him turn away. His knees and hands suddenly felt damp, and when he lifted them to look, they were stained red.

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Review: Tokyo Jihen: Variety

October 2nd, 2007 | Foxes

tokyo_jihen_variety.gifArtist: Tokyo Jihen (aka Tokyo Incidents)
Title: Variety
Label: Virgin Records
Release Date: Sept. 26, 2007
Music Videos: OSCA (see jump) | Killer Tune (see jump)

OK, so I am in the land of the rising sun, and along with sweltering heat and humidity in the late summer days, I am also in the land of where Shiina Ringo lives and performs.  Shiina Ringo, if you don’t know, is probably my favorite singer of all time.  I have all of her albums.  I have her biographical manga.   So when she created Tokyo Jihen, or the Tokyo Incidents, I was super excited to see where she would take this band.

I had a chance to see the Incidents live, but not even 12 hours after tickets went on sale the concert was all sold out!  Color me fucking disappointed.  Heart broken, I head off to the CD/book/game shop Tsutaya and picked up their latest album, Variety, which came out last week.  This is the second album the Ringster has released this year, the first being a solo collaboration with Saito Neko on the music for Sakuran, starring Anna Tsuchiya of Nana fame (I keep tabs on this shit like you wouldn’t believe).  Anyway, Variety is an interesting mix of hip and catchy tunes mixed with mellow tunes, along with the surprising introduction of male vocals.

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Review: The Great Happiness Space

September 21st, 2007 | Foxes

Note: This article is an edited version of the one I’ve written for my blog about my stay in Japan.

Yesterday I saw a screening of the Great Happiness Space, a documentary that takes place in Osaka, Japan and discusses the issue of male prostitution (and to a lesser extent, female prostitution) that take place in one particularly popular male host club (as they’re called), Rakkyo.

Each of the young men are interviewed, who live the lives of playboys and scam artists at the same time. An individual host can make up to the U.S. equivalent of $50,000 a MONTH, sometimes even over $10,000 in one night. Their regular customers, young women who spend gobs and gobs of money to get the attention of one man, are also interviewed. Both sides acknowledge the loneliness and emotional numbness that comes from frequenting such an environment.

The documentary does an excellent job by letting the interviewees’ actions speak for themselves. The crew, for the most part, stays out of the way–an occasional question is heard here and there. Ultimately, the young men and women in the film are strikingly honest, baring all for viewers to witness a side of Japan most would never even comprehend. The film is well-edited and cuts back and forth between various people in order to keep interest and show the different facets of sexualized Japanese youth. Overall, The Great Happiness Space does a great job keeping the film low key and straightforward, and you cannot help feeling for all of the men and women in this movie as part of a generation that is a bit lost.

I highly recommend it to those who want to see how confusing it is to grow up in this new generation of Japan, where young people grow up without really understand who they are. The male hosts often talk about wanting to “heal” or to help the women by doing what they do (comforting them, complimenting them, socializing with them, sleeping with them), which is a bit of a paradox because in doing so, the young men claim to lose their own sense of who they are.

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Review: Books: The Woman in the Dunes by Kobo Abe

July 17th, 2007 | Foxes

snipshot_e41f3hs7gxjh.jpgTitle: The Woman in the Dunes
Author: Kobo Abe
Year:
1962
Rating: 4/5
Thoughts: Extremely provocative, mind-bending, but most of all the uncomfortable. The story takes place in a remote town of Japan, a nonsensical place made of sand where the inhabitants spend their days toiling away under the wrath of the sun, digging their homes out of the sand. As such, the descriptions mostly consist of explaining what dehydration feels like, getting sand in your mouth, having your eyes crust over while sleeping–even the author’s choice of sexual expression is painful sodomy, as the main character (who has a name but is tellingly referred to only as “the man”) has given himself a psychological venereal disease.

This book isn’t like many Japanese “out there” books I’ve read–it’s just mundane enough so that it’s eerie, and the storytelling is quite frustrating as it follows the man’s attempts to escape the town. Although everything is told in a more or less “matter of fact” way, whether the facts are made up or not is hard to tell. Everything about sand, including the physics of it (1/8 mm in diameter) is consistently woven throughout the book. It was hard to read at times because of the repetition, but I did find myself wanting to know the ending quite badly.

Quote Certainly sand was not suitable for life. Yet, was a stationary condition absolutely indispensable for existence? Didn’t unpleasant competition arise precisely because one tried to cling to a fixed position? If one were to give up a fixed position and abandon oneself to the movement of the sands, competition would soon stop. […] While he mused on the effect of the flowing sands, he was seized from time to time by hallucinations in which he himself began to move with the flow.

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Review: Of Montreal: Icons, Abstract Thee

June 27th, 2007 | Foxes

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Artist: Of Montreal
Title: Icons, Abstract Thee
Label: Polyvinyl Records
Release Date: May 8, 2007
Rating: 5/5

I know it’s a little late to review this album, but I heard it for the first time last week and I have to say, it has become one of my favorites. It’s an EP, which means it isn’t a full album, but all the right parts are there. What I love the most about the EP is that, despite the aggressive pop-iness that Of Montreal does best, the subject and lyrics are pretty heavy. The contrast in subject matter and musical arrangement makes some of the songs the saddest I have heard in a while.

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Review: Paul McCartney: Memory Almost Full

June 23rd, 2007 | Foxes

paul_memory.gifArtist: Paul McCartney
Title: Memory Almost Full
Label: Hear Music
Release Date: June 5, 2007
Rating: 3/5
Music Videos: Dance Tonight

There isn’t a great way to review this album without considering the thought process Sir McCartney went through to produce this album, the commercial for which I first saw in an iPod ad. Pretty cool, right? Slick suit, black converse, beautiful Apple design. Unfortunately, aside from this song and perhaps one or two others, this album leaves much to be desired.

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Review: Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End

June 1st, 2007 | Foxes

snipshot_e4q15ime8vt.gifTitle: Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
Release Date: May 25, 2007
Genre: Action/Comedy
Rating: 2.3/5
Trailer: Here

I don’t really care for the Pirates series, but my boyfriend went and saw the supposedly “last” movie of the series. Here’s what he had to say.
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Music: Björk: Volta

May 20th, 2007 | Foxes

bjork_volta.gifArtist: Björk
Title: Volta
Label: Atlantic
Release Date: May 8, 2007
Rating: 3.5/5
Music Videos: Earth Intruders

This album gives me mixed feelings! Definitely keeping with the experimentation, Björk pushes her talents even further in this new album. However, I found some of the songs bland on the first few times that I listened to them–not usually a good sign since I fell in love with nearly all of her other albums on the first round. Read the rest of this entry »

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Review: Hot Fuzz

May 2nd, 2007 | Foxes

hotfuzz.gifTitle: Hot Fuzz
Release Date: Apr. 20, 2007
Genre: Spoof Action Comedy
Rating: 5/5
Trailer: Here

Let me set something straight. I normally dislike spoof comedies. My youngest sister is obsessed with the movie Airplane! and watches it whenever it’s on TV (which about every 45 minutes or so.) Slapstick movies are funny sometimes, but usually are just a jumble of pop culture references blended together with vulgar toilet humor.

But Hot Fuzz. Now there’s a movie that’s got it right.
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Review: Pokemon Diamond

April 29th, 2007 | Foxes

11lqtwdzi5l.jpgGame: Pokemon Diamond
Publisher: Nintendo
Release Date: Apr. 22, 2007
Genre: RPG
Rating: 4/5

This article was written by my boyfriend, an avid Pokemon fan.
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