Child of Fortune (novel) explained

Author:Yuko Tsushima
Isbn:978-4061976986
Pub Date:June 29, 1978 (Japanese)
October 30, 2018 (English)
Child of Fortune
Publisher:Kodansha (Japanese)
Penguin Classics (English)
Genre:Literary fiction, autofiction, I-novel
Language:Japanese
Country:Japan
Preceded By:歓びの島 (Island of Joy)
Followed By:氷原 (Ice Field)
Translator:Geraldine Harcourt
Awards:Women's Literature Prize

is a 1978 novel by Yūko Tsushima.[1] In Japan, It won the Women's Literature Prize in the same year.[2] An English translation by Geraldine Harcourt was published in 2018 by Penguin Classics.[3]

Synopsis

The novel follows Koko, a middle-aged woman and piano teacher, who raises her 11-year-old daughter, Kayako, alone in an apartment and once again gets pregnant after a brief affair.

Critical reception

For LitHub, Rónán Hession recommended the book in a list of books that excelled in empathetic writing.[4] The Japan Times called it "A novel at once powerfully uplifting and achingly sad" and lauded Geraldine Harcourt's "elegant translation". The Japan House in Los Angeles observed how Tsushima tackled the I-novel form with a "distinctly female spin".[5] Similarly, Abhrajyoti Chakraborty in The New Yorker cautioned against reading Tsushima's works, including Child of Fortune, through a strictly biographical lens, stating that such an approach would be "to deny her narrators a selfhood independent of society, and to deny Tsushima the freedom, as a writer, not to be conflated with her protagonists."[6]

After Harcourt's death in 2019, Newsroom wrote a tribute article on her behalf, stating that "Harcourt's translations seem to hold and carry the voices of the original, which strikes me as an unfathomable kind of magic" specifically with regard to Child of Fortune and Territory of Light.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Book: 津島, 佑子 . ja:寵児 . 講談社 . 1978 . 978-4061976986.
  2. News: Kosaka . Kris . December 16, 2017 . 'Child of Fortune': Yuko Tsushima's prize-winning and feminist novel on womanhood . The Japan Times.
  3. Book: Tsushima, Yuko . Child of Fortune . October 30, 2018 . . 978-0241335031 . Harcourt . Geraldine.
  4. Web site: Hession . Rónán . 2020-08-07 . The Quest for Kindness is One of Fiction’s Great Challenges . 2024-11-06 . Literary Hub . en-US.
  5. Web site: December 16, 2019 . Female Voices in Japanese Literature Today . 2024-11-06 . Japan House, Los Angeles . en.
  6. News: Chakraborty . Abhrajyoti . 2019-04-09 . The Overlooked Autofiction of Yuko Tsushima . 2024-11-06 . The New Yorker . en-US . 0028-792X.
  7. Web site: Kung . Melanie . 2022-02-08 . Found in translation . 2024-11-06 . Newsroom . en-US.