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Challenging every preconception about storytelling and prose style, mixing wry humor and riveting emotional depth, Kawakami is today one of Japan’s most important and best-selling writers. She exploded onto the cultural scene first as a musician, then as a poet and popular blogger, and is now an award-winning novelist. Breasts and Eggs paints a portrait of contemporary womanhood in Japan and recounts the intimate journeys of three women as they confront oppressive mores and their own uncertainties on the road to finding peace and futures they can truly call their own. It tells the story of three women: the thirty-year-old Natsu, her older sister, Makiko, and Makiko’s daughter, Midoriko. Makiko has traveled to Tokyo in search of an affordable breast enhancement procedure. She is accompanied by Midoriko, who has recently grown silent, finding herself unable to voice the vague yet overwhelming pressures associated with growing up. Her silence proves a catalyst for each woman to confront her fears and frustrations. On another hot summer’s day ten years later, Natsu, on a journey back to her native city, struggles with her own indeterminate identity as she confronts anxieties about growing old alone and childless.
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would have been a really good book to finish before christmas to use it as relevant information about women and children and pregnancy etc because if a relative asks me one more time when i'm going to settle down and have kids I will scream....loses a star because the two parts are quite disjointed for me....really annoyed we didn't follow more of midoriko and makiko in the second half as they'd been very important in the first half but overall a really good book that I felt dealt with difficult issues and conversations well....had a few ideas of how it might end and it did have my preferred ending but it was done very well! a book i would recommend to others in the future!