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"Yasu was simply crazy. But no crazier than the rest of the war.” Rui Umezawa's first novel weaves in and out of the lives of three generations of the Hayakawa family, starting during World War II in Japan and ending in present-day Toronto. The story is tragic, hilarious, lyrical and universal, tracing the legacy of war and the past on one family's fortunes and memories. Film director Atom Egoyan says: "This ambitious debut creates a dense world of overlapping events -- from the smallest details of domestic life to the grandest scale of atrocity and horror. Rui Umezawa presents this unique…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
"Yasu was simply crazy. But no crazier than the rest of the war.” Rui Umezawa's first novel weaves in and out of the lives of three generations of the Hayakawa family, starting during World War II in Japan and ending in present-day Toronto. The story is tragic, hilarious, lyrical and universal, tracing the legacy of war and the past on one family's fortunes and memories. Film director Atom Egoyan says: "This ambitious debut creates a dense world of overlapping events -- from the smallest details of domestic life to the grandest scale of atrocity and horror. Rui Umezawa presents this unique world of cause and effect with a carefully harnessed sense of despair, yearning and beauty.” Maimed physically and emotionally, Shoji Hayakawa leaves the devastation of post-war Japan and moves to the University of Milwaukee to teach physics. His father, Yasujiro, was the doctor in the village of Kitagawa, and an outspoken pacifist in dangerous times. Shoji and his wife Mitsuyo still recall their wartime childhood: bartering for food, evacuation to the countryside, returning to the burnt remains of the cities. Transplanted into suburban America, Mitsuyo's mother will watch life through the windows, marvelling at how absurdly people act even when they have everything they need: food, water, clothes, and no bombs. Shoji has two sons, Toshi and Kei. Toshi is a gentle boy but sees the world with an abnormal intensity. Objects seem to speak to him. He has to lock himself in a closet to concentrate on his homework, and lies face down in the school corridor with his forehead pressed against the cool linoleum to calm himself. Exuberant but noisy, he is stopped from taking piano lessons. He is an embarrassment to his mother and to his angry brother Kei, who leaves for Canada to build a career as a rock musician. Mitsuyo, so demanding of Kei, considers Toshi insane and never expects anything of him. Yet Toshi, full of imagination, finds humour and wonder in the world. Quill and Quire called The Truth About Death and Dying an extraordinary first novel that "falls somewhere between Thomas Wolfe and Monty Python.” The absurd sense of humour, the unforgettably comic scenes -- such as Yasu emerging naked from the bathroom clutching mushrooms, or dancing in the bomb shelter -- are inextricably entwined with tragic memories. With the dark shadows of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as well as Pearl Harbor always present, this novel examines how our sense of what is normal and what is crazy can be skewed, especially in times of war. Of the passages that take place in wartime Japan, the author says they "owe most of their details to what was told to me by my parents, and to Japanese movies and comic books set during World War II. I grew up with stories of the war and pacifism, both at home and in the Japanese media. My father was never conscripted to fight, because he excelled so much at science and the government felt he would be more useful in a lab than on a battlefield.... My father would often recount, however, having to run and take shelter from bombs while going to university in Nagoya. For the rest of his life, he refused to watch war movies, because the whistling sound of bombs falling frightened him terribly.” "When I think about Japan in relation to the Second World War, more often then not, I'm remembering people who were treated like animals in Japanese POW camps. Or the Chinese who suffered tremendously at the hands of the Japanese military in places like Nanjing or Manchuria.... However, one of the things I think the book illustrates is this: Japanese wartime atrocities were unforgivable, but at the same time, Japanese civilians like my father were suffering too.”

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Autorenporträt
Rui Umezawa won a scholarship to study in Beijing at a time when he had no idea what he wanted to do in life. It was the best thing to ever happen to me, because seeing things like the Great Wall and the Potala Palace in Tibet made me realize how wondrous life can be. I wasn't as aimless when I got back to Canada. I wanted to do and accomplish things. Life has changed direction on me many times since, but at least it's always had direction since then. Born in Tokyo in 1959, Rui was four years old when his family left Japan. His father was a theoretical physicist and the family followed his career to various places, Rui's favourite being Naples, Italy. Blue skies, blue water, great food, great music. There, my schoolmates showed curiosity over the fact that I was Japanese, but I never felt any hostility. Things changed after we moved to the States. Canada wasn't any better. He thinks moving around a lot made him more open-minded. On the other hand, I've never had a friend who's known me since I was little. The family lived in Milwaukee and then Edmonton, where he finished school. He didn't follow in his father's footsteps and pursue the sciences. After a lifetime of hearing from everyone just how great a physicist my father was, I got intimidated. It was only later, after his father passed away, that he would try to read physics written for the layman to get a better understanding of his father's discipline, and what had been occupying his mind so much when he was alive. Rui chose instead to study comparative literature. His high school guidance counsellor heard he wanted to pursue a course of study that would lead to promoting cross-cultural understanding. Rui was intrigued by the idea of studying literature as something integral to the social and cultural system out of which it arises. This desire was partly due to my curiosity about my own Japanese heritage, and partly due to my experiences growing up as a visible minority. So he tried an introductory course when he started at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, and was inspired by his first professor to choose it as a major. He was an American whose specialization, among other things, was Third World literature, and he always had stories to tell about growing up in the American South or living in Africa as a scholar. He later specialized in modernism and literary theory. Exposure to communication theories combined with his later experience as a journalist and a PR specialist developed in Rui a fascination with mass communication. I mean everything from ads on the sides of buses through the news on the front page of the Globe and Mail... I take great interest in how narrative might evolve with digital technology. I am fascinated by how some news stories make the front page of a newspaper while others are buried, and what message this sends out. Newspaper work brought him to Toronto, where he lives with his wife and children. In 1988, he had been working as a reporter and editor at the Alberta Report for about a year. Alberta was in an economic slump at the time, while Toronto was booming. My wife and I moved out here, and I landed a job fairly quickly at the Catholic Register. I was there only for a few months, though, because my wife became pregnant and I needed a better income. He found a job at the Consulate General of Japan, assisting with public relations and cultural activities, but continued as a freelance writer to publish articles, reviews and essays in The Globe and Mail, The Toronto Star, and Venue Magazine, and short stories in Descant magazine. He travelled to Japan regularly from the early seventies to the early nineties; while growing up, he learned much about Japanese life from magazines sent by friends and relatives, and later kept up-to-date through his work at the consulate. One of the first things he published was an article on Chanoyu, the Japanese tea ceremony. He recently published a children's book, Aiko's Flowers, about ikebana, the traditional art of flower arranging, and the value of passing on traditions from generation to generation. He has a black belt in karate, and performs as a storyteller with an amateur troupe, reinterpreting traditional Japanese folktales. I literally have to give voice to my characters, which compels me to understand them better. In some instances, this winds up exposing the darker sides of my own personality... This, in turn, helps me to develop the characters that occupy my original work. Extremely proud of his Japanese cultural heritage and Japan's accomplishments, he finds the country's atrocities during the war especially distressing. Growing up outside Japan, I also had a very real need to feel this pride. But all of Japan's successes -- from the sublime beauty of ukiyo-e woodblock prints to the Sony Walkman -- cannot take away the shame that remains from the war. This tension between pride and shame was something that drove the narrative of the book to a great extent.