Harmless Like You by Rowan Hisayo Buchanan, Paperback, 9781473638341 | Buy online at The Nile
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Harmless Like You

Author: Rowan Hisayo Buchanan  

Paperback

An exciting new voice in fiction captures the fragile personal histories of an estranged mother and son.

Yuki Oyama, a Japanese girl fighting to make it as an artist, and Yuki's son Jay who, as an adult in the present day, is forced to confront his mother who abandoned him when he was only two years old.

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Summary

An exciting new voice in fiction captures the fragile personal histories of an estranged mother and son.

Yuki Oyama, a Japanese girl fighting to make it as an artist, and Yuki's son Jay who, as an adult in the present day, is forced to confront his mother who abandoned him when he was only two years old.

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Description

LONGLISTED FOR THE 2016 JHALAK PRIZE

SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2016 BAMB READERS AWARD FOR BREAKTHROUGH AUTHOR

'This brilliant debut novel by Rowan Hisayo Buchanan is cause for celebration.' LORRIE MOORE

When the meaning of 'home' is complicated, we strive for a sense of connection.

Yet sometimes being alone feels like the easiest choice to make.

In 1968 Yuki is 16 and has not one friend in all of New York.

It's the year her parents move back to Tokyo, but Yuki decides to stay.

As she sketches out her new life, it is also the year she'll fall in love with a shade of orange, climb out a window, meets an aspiring model, and run tangle-haired through the night.

In 2016 gallery owner Jay becomes a father, believing he is a happily married man.

It's the year he will finally confront his mother, who abandoned their family when he was two years old.

Her name is Yuki Oyama and she has been living for decades as an artist in Berlin.

Written with startling beauty and power, HARMLESS LIKE YOU explores the complexities of identity and art and captures, over decades and cities, a fractured family narrative of love, loneliness and reconciliation.

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Awards

Short-listed for Authors' Club Best First Novel Award 2017
Short-listed for Betty Trask Prize 2017
Short-listed for Desmond Elliott Prize 2017

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Critic Reviews

“This is a book I've been waiting for since before its author was born . And yet I could never have predicted it. It is a book about beauty and belonging, suffering and being lost , a book that takes into account history, the implications of separation and disorientation. Rowan Hisayo Buchanan cleaves to her idiosyncrasies, foregoing whitewash in favor of her own glittering vision . She is "the seer, not the seen." The result is a gift- unassuming, elegant, vividly prismatic . Not since Sigrid Nunez's A Feather on the Breath of God has a book shone such a moving light on multiracial, interracial, and transnational relationships . Regardless of your flesh tone, Rowan Hisayo Buchanan's study of color-its history, its strangeness, its allure, and its consequences - will dazzle you .”

This brilliant debut novel by Rowan Hisayo Buchanan is cause for celebration. - LORRIE MOORE

This beautiful novel explores creativity and the complicated relationships between parents and children. - Psychologies

Sublime - calm, profound, beautifully controlled and with startling splashes of colour. - CHRIS CLEAVE

What a beautiful book. So measured and confident for a debut - really impressive stuff. The fine brushwork of a meticulous student of the human condition, set within the rich, widescreen drama of a bold and visionary storyteller. It's like staring at a stone at the bottom of a very clear, but slowly shifting, lake. An enchanting and deftly layered exploration of desire, self-identity and belonging. - EMMA JANE UNSWORTH

Rowan Hisayo Buchanan's elegant, accomplished debut novel delves into complicated familial relationships and examines how yearning for a sense of belonging and a compulsion to make art demand all sorts of uneasy life choices . . . rich and vivid. - Express

Impressive debut . . . sensitively explores loneliness and the desire to belong against the need for freedom, both personal and artistic. - Bookseller, Editor's Pick

Rowan Hisayo Buchanan's passionate, gorgeously-written debut novel investigates harmlessness and harm, power and vulnerability, free will and fate. - ELLIS AVERY, author of The Family Tooth

HARMLESS LIKE YOU is the story of a mother and her son, but it is too an ode to the outsider, a Japanese-American artist who must also create her own, unprecedented identity in 1960s New York. Moving from Manhattan to Berlin, from the Vietnam War to the new millennium, Buchanan's debut explores the thin line between attachment and abandonment, love and pain, selfishness and sacrifice. With kaleidoscopic prose and characters all too human, HARMLESS LIKE YOU is an unforgettable debut, as rich in darkness and light as it is in color. - CHLOE BENJAMIN, author of The Anatomy of Dreams

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About the Author

Rowan Hisayo Buchanan is a Japanese-British-Chinese-American writer. She has a BA from Columbia University, an MFA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and is currently working on a PhD at the University of East Anglia. Her writing has appeared in, among other places, Granta, Guernica and The Harvard Review and she received a Margins fellowship for the Asian American Writers Workshop. She has lived in London, New York, Tokyo, Madison and Norwich.

rowanhisayo.com

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Back Cover

'Elegant and moving' Daily Mail 'Beautiful' The Pool 'Enchanting' Emma Jane Unsworth, author of Animals 'This brilliant debut novel is cause for celebration' Lorrie Moore When the meaning of 'home' is complicated, we strive for a sense of connection. Yet sometimes being alone feels like the easiest choice to make. In 1968 Yuki is 16 and has not one friend in all of New York. It's the year her parents move back to Tokyo, but Yuki decides to stay. As she sketches out her new life, it is also the year she'll fall in love with a shade of orange, climb out a window, meets an aspiring model, and run tangle-haired through the night. In 2016 gallery owner Jay becomes a father, believing he is a happily married man. It's the year he will finally confront his mother, who abandoned their family when he was two years old. Her name is Yuki Oyama and she has been living for decades as an artist in Berlin. Written with startling beauty and power, HARMLESS LIKE YOU explores the complexities of identity and art and captures, over decades and cities, a fractured family narrative of love, loneliness and reconciliation.

Read more

More on this Book

LONGLISTED FOR THE 2016 JHALAK PRIZE SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2016 BAMB READERS AWARD FOR BREAKTHROUGH AUTHOR 'This brilliant debut novel by Rowan Hisayo Buchanan is cause for celebration.' LORRIE MOORE When the meaning of 'home' is complicated, we strive for a sense of connection. Yet sometimes being alone feels like the easiest choice to make. In 1968 Yuki is 16 and has not one friend in all of New York.It's the year her parents move back to Tokyo, but Yuki decides to stay.As she sketches out her new life, it is also the year she'll fall in love with a shade of orange, climb out a window, meets an aspiring model, and run tangle-haired through the night. In 2016 gallery owner Jay becomes a father, believing he is a happily married man.It's the year he will finally confront his mother, who abandoned their family when he was two years old. Her name is Yuki Oyama and she has been living for decades as an artist in Berlin. Written with startling beauty and power, HARMLESS LIKE YOU explores the complexities of identity and art and captures, over decades and cities, a fractured family narrative of love, loneliness and reconciliation.

Read more

Product Details

Publisher
Hodder & Stoughton | Sceptre
Published
18th May 2017
Pages
320
ISBN
9781473638341

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