Books with Unusual Titles – Two Short Reviews

It’s been a while since my last post, but I have been reading intermittently. I am still reading Sherlock Holmes (!) and Noli Me Tangere. Most recently, I have been spending more time at the library and read a couple of short books to mix things up a bit.

Jacob’s Hands: A Fable

Jacob’s Hands is a novelized screenplay by Aldous Huxley and Christopher Isherwood that was published posthumously. It never was made into a movie, but it was produced as a radio drama in 1956.

As a story about a man who discovers he is a healer—and must determine how to ethically use his gift—this is a great concept with some thoughtful moments. Too much was given away in the prologue, though, which woefully detracted from the emotional punch of the last chapter. Having read a few books by Huxley including some nonfiction, I was also expecting some philosophy in this, and there really wasn’t any. Someone should still turn this into a movie and flesh out the ideas a bit more.

Farewell, My Orange

I picked up this debut novel by Iwaki Kei on a whim at the library because the blurb sounded so intriguing—a Japanese woman and a Nigerian woman cross paths in Australia. I was disappointed how pedestrian the book actually felt. Some traumatic events occur, yet I had a hard time connecting with them or with the characters, especially when those conflicts resolved without too much difficulty. The two protagonists were also giving a bit of Mary Sue… they hardly seemed like real women with complex personalities and flaws; they seemed more like stand-ins for the author’s messages about prejudice, language, and motherhood. The messages are fine and important, but presenting them in a heavy-handed way doesn’t make for great reading. (Perhaps this is a fault of the translation?) By the end of the book I was really annoyed, and overall it wasn’t worthwhile for me. I think if you’re looking for a short Japanese novel about a (neuro)minority experience, Convenience Store Woman, for all its flaws, is a much better read.

Check out Dolce Bellezza’s challenge for more Japanese literature reviews:



2 responses to “Books with Unusual Titles – Two Short Reviews”

  1. That first one makes me think of Edgar Cayce, a spiritualist who is known in Selma because he had a photography studio here and discovered a ‘gift’ for healing — he would fall into trances, hear prescriptions from Beyond, and then upon waking he would share the prescriptions. He later wrote books and there’s an institute devoted to studying his works, which I find strange. It’s one of the few non-Civil Rights things that brings tourists to Selma, though the city doesn’t capitalize on it at all

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    1. Just looked him up… amazing (and strange indeed) that he still has a following!

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Hi, I’m Marian—I talk about classics, history, and other books on this blog, as well as on YouTube.

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