Hunchback

Hunchback

Saou Ichikawa

Enjoyment: 4.5Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 4.0
💁‍♀️

A bombshell bestseller in Japan, a provocative, defiant debut novel about a young woman in a care home seeking autonomy and the full possibilities of her life. Born with a congenital muscle disorder, Shaka spends her days in her room in a care home outside Tokyo, relying on an electric wheelchair to get around and a ventilator to breathe. But if Shaka's physical life is limited, her quick, mischievous mind has no she takes e-learning courses on her iPad, publishes explicit fantasies on websites, and anonymously troll-tweets to see if anyone is paying attention (“If I were to live again, I’d want to be a highclass prostitute”). One day, she tweets into the void an offer of an enormous sum of money for a sperm donor. To her surprise—and ours—her new nurse accepts the dare, unleashing a series of events that will forever change Shaka's sense of herself as a woman in the world. Hunchback has shaken Japanese literary culture with its skillful depiction of the physical body and unrepentant humor. Winner of the prestigious Akutagawa Prize, it's a feminist story about the dignity of an individual who insist on her right to make choices for herself, no matter the consequences. Formally creative and refreshingly unsentimental, Hunchback depicts the joy, anger, and desires of a woman demanding autonomy in a world that doesn't aways always grant it to people like her. Full of wit, bite, and heart, this unforgettable novel reminds us all of the full potential of our lives, no matter the limitations we experience.


From the Forum

No posts yet

Kick off the convo with a theory, question, musing, or update

Recent Reviews

Your rating:

  • Read.ingwithlara
    Apr 10, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

    0
    comments 0
    Reply
  • readinglit
    Apr 12, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

    0
    comments 0
    Reply
  • milddaydreams
    Apr 06, 2025
    Enjoyment: 4.5Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 4.0
    💁‍♀️

    "The longer I lived, the more my body collapsed into an ever more aberrant shape. It wasn't collapsing into death. Rather, it collapsed so as to live, collapsed as a testament to all the time I'd withstood. That made my disability decisively different from the fatal diseases or decrepitude of aging that the able-bodied might experience, where there was variation only in timing. When I read a book my spine bends, crushing my lung, puncturing a hole in my throat; when I walk I bang my head–to live, my body breaks. What is the difference between taking life from a body like that, over a body that flourishes to exist?" Let this explain what the book is about. Despite its themes on abortion, being a woman and disability, this was a witty read. Enjoyed it so much.

    4
    comments 3
    Reply
  • View all reviews
    Community recs if you liked this book...