In a suburb on the outskirts of Tokyo, four teenage girls drift through a hot smoggy August and tedious summer school classes. There's dependable Toshi; brainy Terauchi; Yuzan, grief-stricken and confused; and Kirarin, whose late nights and reckless behaviour remain a secret from those around her. Then Toshi's next-door neighbour is found brutally murdered and the girls suspect Worm, the neighbour's son and a high school misfit. But when he disappears (taking Toshi's bike and cell phone with him) the four girls become ...
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In a suburb on the outskirts of Tokyo, four teenage girls drift through a hot smoggy August and tedious summer school classes. There's dependable Toshi; brainy Terauchi; Yuzan, grief-stricken and confused; and Kirarin, whose late nights and reckless behaviour remain a secret from those around her. Then Toshi's next-door neighbour is found brutally murdered and the girls suspect Worm, the neighbour's son and a high school misfit. But when he disappears (taking Toshi's bike and cell phone with him) the four girls become irresistibly drawn into a treacherous vortex of brutality and seduction which rises from within themselves as well as the world around them.
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Good. Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 224 p. Vintage International. May show signs of wear, highlighting, writing, and previous use. This item may be a former library book with typical markings. No guarantee on products that contain supplements Your satisfaction is 100% guaranteed. Twenty-five year bookseller with shipments to over fifty million happy customers.
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Good. Good condition. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains. Bundled media such as CDs, DVDs, floppy disks or access codes may not be included.
Things are not good in Tokyo. If we are to believe the grim details in current Japanese cinema and novels, the city is teeming with angry teenagers who have rebelled against either their parents or the rigid educational regulations of the schools. The alarming increase of delinquency, vandalism, teenage prostitution and drugs indicate that something resembling a revolution is imminent.
The recent appearance of the ?feminist noir? novel, Real World has become the most popular book in Japan and is now on the bookshelves in America where critics are hailing it as a kind of dark manifesto for Japan?s current generation ? one which refuses to submit to the old traditional strictures: parental authority, respect for teachers and a reverence for learning.
Kirino gives her readers a glimpse into the ?darkness of the youthful heart? by focusing on four teenage girls: Toschi, the ?straight arrow? who attends cram school? in a desperate attempt to improve her GPA. Terauchi, the intellectual who sees through her friend?s daily deceptions; Yuzan, the tomboy who is a closet lesbian; and Kirarin, who is reckless and ?willing to try anything for a little fun.? These four students spend each day talking to each other on their cell phones, reading manga comics and devising schemes to deceive their parents.
However, when Toschi discovers that the shy and homely boy next door has murdered his mother and fled, she decides not to tell the police what she knows. When the killer (given the contemptuous name, ?Worm? by Toschi) steals her bike and her cell phone as he flees the city, she hesitates, uncertain as to what she should do.
In the meantime, Worm has found the names of Toschi?s friends listed in her cell phone and begins calling them. After the four friends confer, they decide that the idea of ?aiding and abetting? a murderer could be an exciting adventure.
Step by step, they find themselves drawn into Worm?s world. Yauzan gives him money and food and Kirarin decides to join him as he travels further and further beyond the city, living on ?quick food,? and sleeping behind convenience stores. To the four students, Worm may have found a means of escaping rules and regulations. Is it possible that his rootless and dangerous existence is better than ?the real world??
The title of the novel is especially significant. None of the major characters feel that they live in ?the real world.?
In fact, they have all gone to considerable trouble to create fantasies that they prefer to reality. At school, many of the students not only create cliques, they even forge new identities. Toschi frequently tells teachers and government officials that her name is Ninna Hori and provides fictitious details about her family, home and school. An especially popular clique is the Barbie Dolls in which all the members dress in accordance. Other groups are more ominous such as the ones who pattern their dress and speech after famous serial killers (The Dahmers, the Mansons, etc.), or characters in the cult film, ?Battle Royale.?
All of the students Real World share a common obsession: American teenagers. All spend a great deal of time acquiring appropriate clothing (Nikes and chinos) and miming American jargon. Conversations between the four friends are rift with expressions like ?Dude,? and ?Babe,? and their favorite nighttime entertainment is karaoke. Certainly, Kirino has a remarkable talent for reproducing the world of Japanese teenagers and has written a dozen books that are bestsellers in Tokyo (Grotesque and Out). Several have been made into films). However, her depictions are not exactly groundbreaking. The futuristic film, ?Battle Royale? (2003) and its sequel, ?Requiem? also depict the coming of a revolution in which Japan?s suppressed youth rebels.
In addition, Kirino?s vision has much in common with the spate of current Japanese horror films that are filled with murderous teenage girls dressed in school uniforms and armed with machine guns ? action in which the battle lines are clearly drawn. The enemy camp is the adult world (parents, school officials, the government) and ?anyone over 35? ? all are treated as either a different species (aliens/enemies), or they are dismissed as irrelevant. It may be that the worst is yet to come. If so, I?m sure Nasuo Kirino will be there to record it.