
- 370 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
An elderly man struggles to find serenity in the wake of Japan's 2011 nuclear accident in this cross-cultural novel from a prize-winning author.
"The fragmented and destructive power wielded by memory and trauma in developing one's outlook on life, coupled with a two-pronged narrative technique for character development, makes Neuman's [ Fracture ] a winner." ? Library Journal (starred review)
Mr. Yoshie Watanabe, a former electronics company executive and a survivor of the atomic bomb, has always lived like a fugitive from his own memories. He's spent decades traveling the world, making a life in different languages, only to find himself home again, living in Tokyo in his old age. On the afternoon of March 11, 2011, Watanabe, like millions of others, is stunned by powerful tremors. A massive earthquake has struck to the north, triggering the Fukushima nuclear disaster—and a stirring of the collective past. As the catastrophe unfolds, Watanabe's mind, too, undergoes a tectonic shift. With his native land yet again under nuclear threat, he braces himself to make the most surprising decision of his nomadic life.
Meanwhile, four women who have known him intimately at various points in time narrate their stories to a strangely obsessive Argentinian journalist. Their memories, colored by their respective cultures and describing different ways of loving, trace sociopolitical maps of Paris, New York, Buenos Aires, and Madrid over the course of the twentieth century. The result is a metalingual, border-defying constellation of fractures in life and nature—proof that nothing happens in only one place, that every human event reverberates to the ends of the earth.
With unwavering empathy and bittersweet humor, and facing some of the most urgent environmental concerns of our time, Andrés Neuman's Fracture is a powerful novel about the resilience of humankind, and the beauty that can emerge from broken things.
"[Neuman is] a wildly talented and curious writer whose books roam energetically around the world and across genres. . . . Fracture is very much about how catastrophe and trauma ripple across the world—the book hopscotches from Tokyo to Madrid, Paris, Buenos Aires, and New York—and, in that sense, offers an eerie reflection of the global reach of our present pandemic." — Vanity Fair
" Fracture is by far . . . Neuman's most successful experiment. . . . That which should be said must be said—and Neumann undoubtedly says it beautifully." — The Guardian
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Notice
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- 1. Memory Plates
- 2. Violet and the Carpets
- 3. The Size of the Island
- 4. Lorrie and the Scars
- 5. Eye Inward
- 6. Mariela and the Interpretations
- 7. The Flower in the Rubble
- 8. Carmen and the Lesions
- 9. Pinedo and the Antipodes
- 10. Last Circle
- 11. And the Water
- Acknowledgments and Foreigners
- Also by Andrés Neuman
- A Note About the Author and Translators
- Newsletter Sign-up
- Contents
- Copyright