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Les Tendres plaintes book cover
Les Tendres plaintes
1996
First Published
3.63
Average Rating
242
Number of Pages

Blessée par l’infidélité de son mari, Ruriko décide de disparaître. Elle quitte Tokyo et se réfugie dans un chalet en pleine forêt où elle tente de retrouver sa sérénité. Ruriko est calligraphe. Non loin, dans un autre chalet, s’est installé Nitta, un ancien pianiste de renom devenu facteur de clavecins, un homme habité par un calme particulier qui semble absorber les sons des instruments qu’il fabrique. Bien qu’assisté chaque jour dans son ouvrage minutieux par une jeune femme prénommée Kaoru, il vit seul avec un vieux chien aveugle et sourd. Invitée en ces lieux par Kaoru, la calligraphe observe et s’interroge sur la relation du facteur et de son aide. Ainsi elle apprend que Nitta ne peut plus jouer en présence d’autrui, que seule persiste en lui la capacité de vivre avec des sons invisibles. Mais, un matin, la calligraphe surprend Nitta installé au clavecin jouant “Les Tendres Plaintes” pour Kaoru. Ecrites en 1996, “Les Tendres Plaintes” contiennent tous les éléments révélateurs de la personnalité littéraire de Yoko Ogawa. Le regard porté sur la nature, sur ses sonorités, l’intensité de ses nuits, l’indicible solitude des êtres et leurs relations fugitives donnent à cette histoire une étrange résonance : celle qui prend source au coeur de l’inconscient.

Avg Rating
3.63
Number of Ratings
458
5 STARS
17%
4 STARS
40%
3 STARS
32%
2 STARS
9%
1 STARS
1%
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Author

Yoko Ogawa
Yoko Ogawa
Author · 22 books

Yōko Ogawa (小川 洋子) was born in Okayama, Okayama Prefecture, graduated from Waseda University, and lives in Ashiya. Since 1988, she has published more than twenty works of fiction and nonfiction. Her novel The Professor and his Beloved Equation has been made into a movie. In 2006 she co-authored „An Introduction to the World's Most Elegant Mathematics“ with Masahiko Fujiwara, a mathematician, as a dialogue on the extraordinary beauty of numbers. A film in French, "L'Annulaire“ (The Ringfinger), directed by Diane Bertrand, starring Olga Kurylenko and Marc Barbé, was released in France in June 2005 and subsequently made the rounds of the international film festivals; the film, some of which is filmed in the Hamburg docks, is based in part on Ogawa's "Kusuriyubi no hyōhon“ (薬指の標本), translated into French as "L'Annulaire“ (by Rose-Marie Makino-Fayolle who has translated numerous works by Ogawa, as well as works by Akira Yoshimura and by Ranpo Edogawa, into French). Kenzaburō Ōe has said, 'Yōko Ogawa is able to give expression to the most subtle workings of human psychology in prose that is gentle yet penetrating.' The subtlety in part lies in the fact that Ogawa's characters often seem not to know why they are doing what they are doing. She works by accumulation of detail, a technique that is perhaps more successful in her shorter works; the slow pace of development in the longer works requires something of a deus ex machina to end them. The reader is presented with an acute description of what the protagonists, mostly but not always female, observe and feel and their somewhat alienated self-observations, some of which is a reflection of Japanese society and especially women's roles within in it. The tone of her works varies, across the works and sometimes within the longer works, from the surreal, through the grotesque and the—sometimes grotesquely—humorous, to the psychologically ambiguous and even disturbing.

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