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The Floating Girl
 
 

The Floating Girl [Hardcover]

Sujata Massey
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Novelist and former Baltimore Evening Sun reporter Massey (The Salaryman's Wife) takes readers on a thoughtful tour of contemporary Japanese youth culture in this accomplished murder mystery. Rei Shimura is a Japanese-American antiques dealer who, looking to supplement her income, has begun writing a column for the Gaijin Times, Tokyo's English-language newspaper. When the paper's owner decides to transform the publication from a conventional news outlet to a comic book magazine, Shimura gets what is, for her, an unwanted assignment--to write an article on the history and culture of manga, or Japanese comic books. The newspaper asks Rika Fuchida, an ambitious student intern, to assist her, but Shimura prefers the assistance of her new boyfriend, Takeo Kayama. With his help, she discovers Mars Girl--a manga that follows the adventures of a superhero who, like Shimura, is bicultural (half-Martian, half-Japanese)--and the Showa Story, in which the superhero travels back in time, to 1930s Japan. Determined to keep her job at the newspaper, Shimura pursues Mars Girl's creator, Kunio Takahashi, in both the hip and the less-than-savory sides of Tokyo. Things begin to get shady, however, when Shimura is injured falling down a flight of stairs (was she pushed?) and when one of Takahashi's friends turns up dead, dressed as Mars Girl, in a river. Shimura begins to suspect that she is being followed, not only by her "assistant," the ambitious intern, but also by gangsters. Deftly sketching everyday life in parts of Tokyo rarely seen by tourists, Massey tells a series of overlapping stories about identity, the popular media and the hilarious frenzy of contemporary comic book culture. Agents, Ellen Geiger and Dave Barbor at Curtis Brown. (May)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

The fourth entry in Massey's series starring Rei Shimura, a Japanese American antiques dealer living in Tokyo, maintains the high standards of its predecessors. Just as The Flower Master provided an in-depth look at the Japanese art of flower arranging, this novel explores the Japanese fascination with animation, or manga. In her new position with a Japanese magazine for foreigners, Rei writes about antiques--until the boss assigns her a story on manga. As Rei enters the secretive world of manga, where people dress up as their favorite characters, a man she talks to is murdered. One of the manga artists, who may hold the answers, is missing. With her wry humor and her multicultural background, Rei is one of the most complex female protagonists around. She is Japanese, but she is also an American living in Japan, and this dichotomy gives her observations on Japanese culture a fascinating double edge. Another must-read from an author who has honed the skill of captivating and educating her readers at the same time. Jenny McLarin
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars I want to go to this Japan! Costumes, Fantasy, Wackiness, Oct 16 2003
OK, I've never been to Japan, but I'd like to see this version of Japan, definitely.
This book is very stylish, hip, cyberpunk, yet also mixes in the beautiful traditional things about Japan, which can also be a double-edged sword in being frigidly traditional and coldly rejecting.

I really enjoy the Rei's spunk and drive to keep working in a very nonreceptive overall environment, although there were some friendly individuals who were nice to her. People just cannot get over her mixed race, old-maid syndrome and her short hair--it just brings social interactions to a screeching halt.

This fantasy world of anime and role playing is amazing and offbeat. If they really do have huge conventions of anime role-players, I would sooo love to be there, just to see the spectacle.

If you liked this book, you'll like the movie "Chungking Express", which is very quirky as well.

Storyline: Rei gets assigned to work on a manga article. She knows nothing about it, but on investigating, a whole new world unfolds, with thousands of people totally obsessed with role playing, having huge conventions, wearing character costumes. Then, one of her sources turns up dead in the river, and her other sources are running scared. There's mafia at the beach and other fun.

About the boyfriend, there were some things about him that turned me off, I thought he was self-centered and self-obsessed in how he treated her, especially the swimming at the beach scene, and I'm glad she's not going gagga over him. It's good that he cares about the environment, yet he doesn't really care that deeply for her. He means well though.

I really enjoyed that she has strong, funky friendships that are highly entertaining and that give her some social support. Her friend Richard and his shenanigans are hilarious.

I would love to see a movie "ChungKing Express #2"-version of this book.
Another good book on wacky conventions and crazy people at them: "Bimbos of the Death Sun".

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5.0 out of 5 stars Manga to Die for, Oct 9 2003
By 
Vesta Irene (the Pacific Northwest) - See all my reviews
Floating Girls were courtesans, who lived in the Floating World, in the Japan of old, a fantasy world where reality didn't intrude. Today underground groups of young people, extreme fans of Manga, animation comics, live hidden lives, reading, writing and imitating their heroes.

Rei is supplementing her income by writing art and antique articles for a magazine geared toward foreigners and she's asked to do a story about a talented Manga fan artist. As she tries to track down the apparently missing young man, she realizes that there is more to the story than meets the eye. Then Manga artists start turning up dead. Rei is determined to find out the truth, no matter what the risk to herself or what the cost.

Once again Sujata Massey treats us to a wonderful mystery and takes us on a tour of modern Japan that even a Gaijin can understand.

Reviewed by Vesta Irene

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5.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't Put It Down, Jun 30 2003
I just love this series. It is so completely different, so calming and yet so very interesting at the same time, that at last I can use the word "unique" without spouting a cliche.

In this, the fourth book in the Rei Shimura series, our heroine, half Japanese, half American, is up to her kimono in trouble, as usual. Deciding to supplement her antiques business by writing a monthly column in The Gaijin, a newspaper largely read by foreigners in Japan, she learns to her dismay that the publisher is about to change the format. Instead of Rei's usual scholarly works, he wants her (and the others on the staff) to write in the form of a "manga," the wildly popular Japanese comic books.

Rei, who doesn't even know what a manga is, is quickly drawn into the fascinating, almost cultish world of Japanese animation and comic books--where obsessive fans think nothing of walking the streets dressed as their favorite character(s), and where would-be comic book artists are encouraged to draw their own versions of their favorites with no fear of reprisal from the publishing companies.

Rei's submersion into this sub-world leads her, of course, straight to a murder. With her tenacious American side battling her demure Japanese side, Rei throws herself into the mystery in typical fashion--and winds up embroiled in the feared Japanese underworld.

Simply a delight from start to finish...this series is perfect for summertime reading!

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