Immagine dell'autore.

Ayako Sono

Autore di No Reason for Murder

155 opere 342 membri 1 recensione

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: By Unknown - Japanese magazine "The Mainichi Graphic, 15 January 1956 issue" published by The Mainichi Newspapers Co.,Ltd., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=35687538

Opere di Ayako Sono

No Reason for Murder (2003) 24 copie
Watcher from the Shore (1990) 11 copie
Miracles, a novel (1977) 6 copie
老いの才覚 (2010) 4 copie
ボクは猫よ (1985) 4 copie
至福 : 現代小人伝 (1979) 3 copie
無名詩人 (1983) 3 copie
紅梅白梅 (1980) 3 copie
天上の青. 上 (1990) 3 copie
太郎物語. 大学編 (1987) 3 copie
天上の青. 下 (1990) 3 copie
無名碑. 下 (1978) 3 copie
太郎物語. 高校編 (1985) 3 copie
残照に立つ (1979) 3 copie
ほんとうの話 (1992) 3 copie
永遠の前の一瞬 (1990) 2 copie
聖書の中の友情論 (1994) 2 copie
仮の宿 (1981) 2 copie
昼寝するお化け (1994) 2 copie
ギリシアの神々 (1989) 2 copie
魂の自由人 (2003) 2 copie
運命は均される (1999) 2 copie
親子、別あり (1995) 2 copie
悪と不純の楽しさ (1997) 2 copie
人びとの中の私 (1980) 2 copie
正義は胡乱 (2000) 2 copie
七歳のパイロット (1998) 2 copie
今日をありがとう (2003) 2 copie
あとは野となれ (1992) 2 copie
大説でなくて小説 (1992) 2 copie
アラブのこころ (1979) 2 copie
中年以後 (1999) 2 copie
湯布院の月 (1998) 2 copie
地球の片隅の物語 (1997) 2 copie
ほくそ笑む人々 (1998) 2 copie
沈船検死 (2003) 2 copie
聖書の中の友情論 (1990) 2 copie
近ごろ好きな言葉 (1996) 2 copie
悪と不純の楽しさ (1994) 2 copie
地を潤すもの (1980) 2 copie
この悲しみの世に (1989) 2 copie
寂しさの極みの地 (1999) 2 copie
讃美する旅人 (1995) 2 copie
詩心 (1983) 2 copie
慈悲海岸 (1987) 2 copie
ぜったい多数 (1971) 2 copie
木枯しの庭 (1981) 2 copie
テニス・コート (1986) 2 copie
天上の青 上巻 (1993) 2 copie
天上の青 下巻 (1993) 2 copie
遠ざかる足音 (1979) 2 copie
二十三階の夜 (2002) 2 copie
湖水誕生 (1988) 2 copie
人間の罠. 中 (1977) 2 copie
海抜0メートル (1978) 2 copie
(1976) 2 copie
一条の光 (1977) 2 copie
一枚の写真 (1993) 2 copie
いま日は海に (1979) 2 copie
火山列島 (1987) 2 copie
神の汚れた手. 上 (1986) 2 copie
神の汚れた手. 下 (1986) 2 copie
消えない航跡 (1985) 2 copie
希望 (1980) 2 copie
狂王ヘロデ (2001) 2 copie
極北の光 (1995) 2 copie
虚構の家 (1976) 2 copie
人間の罠. 上 (1977) 2 copie
人間の罠. 下 (1977) 2 copie
愛の証明 2 copie
夢に殉ず. 下 (1997) 2 copie
花束と抱擁 (1984) 2 copie
無名碑 2 copie
人間の罠 2 copie
わが恋の墓標 (1971) 2 copie
黎明 (2001) 2 copie
夜の明ける前に (1983) 2 copie
夢に殉ず. 上 (1997) 2 copie
夢を売る商人 (1984) 2 copie
無名碑. 上 (1977) 2 copie
星と魚の恋物語 (1977) 2 copie
春の飛行 (1977) 2 copie
Le mani sporche di Dio (1990) 1 copia
円型水槽 1 copia
火山列島 1 copia
貧困の光景 (2007) 1 copia
一条の光 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Sono, Ayako
Data di nascita
1931-09-17
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
Japan
Luogo di nascita
Japan

Utenti

Recensioni

Dr. Sadaharu Nobeji is an OB/GYN who’s philosophy of life seems to be “Look out for number one, in the laziest manner possible.” This is the ethical theme that runs through the novel by Japanese author Ayako Sono in Watcher from the Shore (New York: Kodansha International, 1989). The story follows Sadaharu through a season of his life, an established physician in middle-age with his own clinic in a quiet part of Japan. We see into his family life, his friendships and his medical practice, which, despite his best efforts, overlap in increasingly complex ways.

Sono shows the complexity of a physician practicing Sadaharu’s specialty in a time when abortion is legal and people are particularly sensitive to how they appear to others. While the Japanese may have a highly evolved set of behaviors to regulate their persona before others, as is seen in James Clavell’s Shogun, I felt the behavior of the characters portrayed in Sono’s book was universal. I have seen some of it first-hand, and if we looked deeply within our culture I’m certain we would find examples of the extremes presented here.

As an OB/GYN, Sadaharu finds both the bringing forth of life and the ending of it to be all in a day’s work. He does not have any feelings of conscience regarding the practice of abortion and finds that the roughly 200 he performs per year to be essential to the financial health of his practice. There is a caveat though, as on the rare occasion where he performs a late-term abortion. It is a practice he avoids due to its risks of complication, but he also finds it to be on the very edge of killing an actual human being.

For Sadaharu, the fetus is not human if it can survive outside the womb, and he has no qualms about abortions earlier in a pregnancy. He also has no reservations about choosing abortion in cases of suspected birth defects, for the sake of convenience, or to preserve social standing. True-to-form, he keeps these opinions to himself, sharing them only with a close friend when he has had too much to drink.

There are some interesting turns of plot here, particularly within Sadaharu’s marriage and his friendships with an older widowed woman and the Catholic priest she introduces him to. In his conversations with the woman, who is Catholic, and the priest, we learn that Sadaharu’s main goal in life is to preserve the homeostasis he lives in, i.e. maintaining his personal comfort with minimal effort. It is a goal that can’t last.

As Sadaharu moves through this season of his life he finds himself thinking, pondering the possibility of a reference point in life outside of himself. Does he find one? We don’t know. In Sono’s tale of a man with the barest sense of personal ethics she invites us to consider our own ethical framework, trusting that in so doing we’ll discern that life is about more than just us. Much more.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
BradKautz | Nov 3, 2012 |

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Statistiche

Opere
155
Utenti
342
Popolarità
#69,721
Voto
3.8
Recensioni
1
ISBN
141
Lingue
2

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