SPRING SALE 📚 Buy 3+ Books | Get 25% Off

The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Three Streets, Yoko Tawada

Three Streets

Yoko Tawada

Reader Score

65%

65% of readers

recommend this book

The always astonishing Yoko Tawada here takes a walk on the supernatural side of the street. In "Kollwitzstrasse," as the narrator muses on former East Berlin's new bourgeois health food stores, so popular with wealthy young people, a ghost boy begs her to buy him the old-fashioned sweets he craves. She worries that sugar's still sugar--but why lecture him, since he's already dead? Then white feathers fall from her head and she seems to be turning into a crane . . . Pure white kittens and a great Russian poet haunt "Majakowskiring" the narrator who reveres Mayakovsky's work is delighted to meet his ghost. And finally, in "Pushkin Allee," a huge Soviet-era memorial of soldiers comes to life--and, "for a scene of carnage everything was awfully well-ordered." Each of these stories opens up into new dimensions the work of this magisterial writer.

Book Details

  • Publisher: New Directions Publishing Corporation
  • Publish Date: Sep 27th, 2022
  • Pages: 64
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.07in - 6.26in - 0.49in - 0.61lb
  • EAN: 9780811229302
  • Categories: AbsurdistGhostLiterary

More books to explore

Book Cover for: Call Me Zebra, Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi
Book Cover for: The Liar's Dictionary, Eley Williams
Book Cover for: Jonathan Abernathy You Are Kind, Molly McGhee
Book Cover for: One's Company, Ashley Hutson
Book Cover for: Jimi Hendrix Live in LVIV, Andrey Kurkov
Book Cover for: Berg, Ann Quin
Book Cover for: Days by Moonlight, André Alexis
Book Cover for: Michael Kohlhaas, Heinrich Von Kleist
Book Cover for: Sprawl, Danielle Dutton
Book Cover for: Flicker: A Fictitious Memoir of Our Life with Dissociative Identity Disorder, Jack Norton
Book Cover for: Last Orgy of the Divine Hermit, Mark Leyner
Book Cover for: Dog Symphony, Sam Munson
Book Cover for: Plastic, Scott Guild
Book Cover for: Harold, Steven Wright
Book Cover for: Eleanor, Or, the Rejection of the Progress of Love, Anna Moschovakis

About the Author

Tawada, Yoko: -

Yoko Tawada was born in Tokyo in 1960, moved to Hamburg when she was twenty-two, and then to Berlin in 2006. She writes in both Japanese and German, and has published several books--stories, novels, poems, plays, essays--in both languages. She has received numerous awards for her writing including the Akutagawa Prize, the Adelbert von Chamisso Prize, the Tanizaki Prize, the Kleist Prize, the Goethe Medal, and the National Book Award. New Directions publishes her story collections Where Europe Begins (with a Preface by Wim Wenders) and Facing the Bridge, as well her novels The Naked Eye, The Bridegroom Was a Dog, Memoirs of a Polar Bear, The Emissary, Scattered All over the Earth, Paul Celan and the Trans-Tibetan Angel, Suggested in the Stars, and forthcoming in autumn 2025 is Archipelago of the Sun, the final novel in her Scattered trilogy.

Mitsutani, Margaret: -

Margaret Mitsutani has lived in Japan since the mid-1970s and was a finalist for the National Book Award for her translation of Yoko Tawada's Scattered All Over the Earth and winner of the National Book Award for her translation of Tawada's The Emissary. She also translates Japan's 1994 Nobel Prize laureate Kenzaburo Oe.

More books by Yoko Tawada

Book Cover for: Suggested in the Stars, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: The Emissary, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Paul Celan and the Trans-Tibetan Angel, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Scattered All Over the Earth, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Memoirs of a Polar Bear, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Exophony: Voyages Outside the Mother Tongue, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: The Bridegroom Was a Dog, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Where Europe Begins: Stories, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: The Naked Eye, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Yoko Tawada in Dialogue, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Archipelago of the Sun, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Yoko Tawada's Portrait of a Tongue: An Experimental Translation by Chantal Wright, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Facing the Bridge, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Emisario, El, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: Memorias de Una Osa Polar, Yoko Tawada
Book Cover for: A Poem for a Book, Yoko Tawada

Praise for this book

Tawada's stories agitate the mind like songs half-remembered or treasure boxes whose keys are locked within.-- "The New York Times"
Tawada's strange, exquisite book toys with ideas of language, identity, and what it means to own someone else's story or one's own.-- "The New Yorker"
Tawada is reminiscent of Nikolai Gogol, for whom the natural situation for a ghost story was a minor government employee saving up to buy a fancy coat, the natural destiny of a nose to haunt its owner as an overbearing nobleman.--Rivka Galchen "The New York Times Magazine"
These stories reinvent familiar landmarks and artworks, giving readers an imaginative and hopeful way to grapple with the history that's written into the urban landscape.-- "Publishers Weekly"
Three Streets is one of the most explicitly dialectical works in Tawada's oeuvre. It pursues a left project not only in form but also in content--an engagement with the plight of the poor, the disenfranchised, the forgotten--and leaves her readers no doubt that, at the end of the day, her project has political stakes.--Reed McConnell "The Baffler"
"The mystery of what it means to be human"--this phrase, which pops up early in "Kollwitz Strasse," is an apt description of what Tawada aims to explore in these stories. From one moment to the next, her narratives can be mystifying. In time, though, they cohere into engrossing meditations on historical memory and the oft-baffling nature of life in this century."--Kevin Canfield "World Literature Today"
In her latest work of fiction Three Streets, Tawada brings her remarkable intelligence and linguistic playfulness to bear on the cityscape of Berlin itself - or, more specifically, its former East. On Kollwitzstraße, Majakowskiring and Puschkinallee, Tawada conjures a series of ghostly encounters with the past, present and supernatural possibilities of our history-heavy city. This klein aber fein addition to Tawada's oeuvre, translated elegantly by Margaret Mitsutani, compresses plenty of its author's trademark offbeat brilliance into a pleasingly short format.--Alexander Wells "Exberliner"
Each 'street' in the volume, translated by Margaret Mitsutani, is both charming and unnerving...This may well be Tawada's finest work, partly because of how moving it is when someone capable of so much wit knows when to be reverent. A perfect story.--J.W. McCormack "The New Left Review"