"Like a good meditation: quiet, surprising and deeply satisfying."
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New York Times Book Review "Atmospheric, meditative story of memory and loss in a gentrifying Tokyo neighborhood . . . An elegant story that is in many ways more reminiscent of Mishima and Akutagawa than many contemporary Japanese writers."
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Kirkus Reviews "
Spring Garden by Tomoka Shibasaki looks at loneliness and loss with uncommon detail and understated force . . . Shibasaki's minimalist language comes across with poetic sensibility. Every word matters in this unflinching and quietly powerful novella . . . a brief, exquisitely crafted story of human connection in a contemporary, alienating society."
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Shelf Awareness for Readers, starred review "Measured, understated and poetic at the right moment . . . making the novel difficult to put down."
–Japan Society Journal (UK) "[A] delicate, intimate novella."
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The Lady magazine