Disappear Doppelgaenger Disappear: A Novel
自己の輪郭が揺らぐ韓国系アメリカ人男性を追う長篇。消えていく感覚と分身の出現を通して、他者に見えることと存在することを問い直す。
作品情報
自己の輪郭が揺らぐ韓国系アメリカ人男性を追う長篇。消えていく感覚と分身の出現を通…
自己の輪郭が揺らぐ韓国系アメリカ人男性を追う長篇。消えていく感覚と分身の出現を通して、他者に見えることと存在することを問い直す。
書籍情報
- 出版社
- Little A
- 発売日
- 2020-08-11
- ページ数
- 316ページ
- 言語
- 英語
- サイズ
- 13.97 x 2.54 x 20.96 cm
- ISBN-13
- 9781503943261
- ISBN-10
- 1503943267
- 価格
- 6898 JPY
- カテゴリ
- 洋書/Literature & Fiction/Genre Fiction/Political
Finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. From the bestselling author of The Hundred-Year Flood comes an incredibly entertaining and profoundly affecting tour de force about a Korean American man’s strange and ordinary attempts to exist. Matt Kim is always tired. He keeps passing out. His cat is dead. His wife and daughter have left him. He’s estranged from his adoptive family. People bump into him on the street as if he isn’t there. He is pretty sure he’s disappearing. His girlfriend, Yumi, is less convinced. But then she runs into someone who looks exactly like her, and her doppelgänger turns out to have dated someone who looks exactly like Matt. Except the other Matt was superior in every way. He was clever, successful, generous, and beloved―until one day he suddenly and completely vanished without warning. How can Matt Kim protect his existence when a better version of him wasn’t able to? Or is his worse life a reason for his survival? Set in a troubling time in which a presidential candidate is endorsed by the KKK and white men in red hats stalk Harvard Square, Disappear Doppelgänger Disappear is a haunting and frighteningly funny novel about Asian American stereotypes, the desires that make us human, puns, and what happens to the self when you have to become someone else to be seen.
Matthew Salesses is the author of The Hundred-Year Flood , an Amazon bestseller and Best Book of September; an Adoptive Families best book of 2015; a Millions Most Anticipated of 2015; and a best book of the season at BuzzFeed, Refinery29, and Gawker, among others. He is also the author of I’m Not Saying, I’m Just Saying and the nonfiction work Different Racisms: On Stereotypes, the Individual, and Asian American Masculinity . Adopted from Korea at age two, Matthew was named by BuzzFeed in 2015 as one of “32 Essential Asian American Writers.”
レビュー
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I don't even know how to start except to say this book is amazing, and it compelled me to keep reading. I couldn't put it down. A man split in two. A world split in two. Matt Kim travels between two versions of earth to find the murderer of his doppelganger. Set against a backdrop of political unrest that is hinted at just enough to keep you in the know, this book will keep you reading until the stellar end. Recommended!
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I found this novel through the author's posting about it on Twitter. I'm glad I read it. There is a surreal quality to the writing that kept me, as the reader, not only wondering who the characters *really* were but also had me wondering about my own identity. Are there other versions of each of us? Should we have traveled different paths? What if we had been ripped from one identity and parachuted into another? The author describes it as the best book he will ever write. I can feel how truly it comes from his experiences and I hope it is one of many "best books" he will ever write.
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There’s much going on in this novel that has been short-listed for the PEN/Faulkner award. The narrator, Matt Kim, is searching for his identity and trying to move on after dealing with his parents dying when he was a child, having adoptive parents, getting married, having a child of his own, and getting divorced. He is learning to navigate his new life and maintain a healthy relationship with his daughter Charlotte, who now lives with Jennifer, his ex-wife, and her lover, a detective. He has a girlfriend, Sandra, whose doppelganger is named Yumi. Matt is Asian American and believes he is invisible or disappearing. Some of his themes relate to the discrimination and bias experienced by Asian Americans. Other themes result from “adulting” and learning to cope with life's challenges. Rather than trying to summarize the plot that involves living situations, career issues, and many complicated relationship topics, following are some of the notes I made while reading that relate to the real-life problems the author explores via Matt Kim and his doppelganger, Matt Chung: -Walls and boundaries are probably invisible places inside of us. -Because of difficulties coping, do we all seemingly disappear from relationships, jobs and parenting, and other responsibilities? -Do Asian Americans and other targeted groups split into another to survive American culture? Sacrifice their true identities? -Do the characters in the book have doubles or doppelgängers because they cannot be themselves? -Does the main character have to leave part of himself behind so he can move on? -Do we all have a desire not to feel when faced with setbacks in life? -The duality of living between cultures affects self and identity. -Being an adoptee presents a unique set of challenges; much more so when adoptive parents are culturally different—racially, religiously, and essentially in every way. - Asian stereotypes and bias are manifested when Asians are -----mistaken for each other -----asked if they speak English -----all assumed to be Chinese -----ignored and “looked past” Matthew Salesses creates complex characters who convey so much about human connections, and they do it with humor in such a thought-provoking manner.
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How to even describe the reading of this book? Salesses simultaneously made me quake with the beauty of language and thought and peer deeper into its meaninglessness, its less meaning-ness, more meanness. If you read this book, you'll find yourself staring at you, or your dopplegänger, in the mirror, and bandying words about in your, or your dopplegänger's, review. What a book, what an act, what a writer.
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Disappear, Doppelganger, Disappear reads like a dream, often slipping from the real to the surreal in the space of a sentence; it speaks to the absurdity of modern America. This book deserves so much more love--it's one I can't wait to re-read.
関連する文学賞
- PEN/Faulkner賞(フィクション部門) 第41回(2021年) ・Nominee