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Life Ceremony
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
The long-awaited first short story-collection by the author of the cult sensation Convenience Store Woman, tales of weird love, heartfelt friendships, and the unsettling nature of human existence With Life Ceremony, the incomparable Sayaka Murata is back with her first collection of short stories ever to be translated into English. In Japan, Murata is particularly admired for her short stories, which are sometimes sweet, sometimes shocking, and always imbued with an otherworldly imagination and uncanniness. In these twelve stories, Murata mixes an unusual cocktail of humor and horror to portray both the loners and outcasts as well as turning the norms and traditions of society on their head to better question them. Whether the stories take place in modern-day Japan, the future, or an alternate reality is left to the reader's interpretation, as the characters often seem strange in their normality in a frighteningly abnormal world. In "A First-Rate Material," Nana and Naoki are happily engaged, but Naoki can't stand the conventional use of deceased people's bodies for clothing, accessories, and furniture, and a disagreement around this threatens to derail their perfect wedding day. "Lovers on the Breeze" is told from the perspective of a curtain in a child's bedroom that jealously watches the young girl Naoko as she has her first kiss with a boy from her class and does its best to stop her. "Eating the City" explores the strange norms around food and foraging, while "Hatchling" closes the collection with an extraordinary depiction of the fractured personality of someone who tries too hard to fit in. In these strange and wonderful stories of family and friendship, sex and intimacy, belonging and individuality, Murata asks above all what it means to be a human in our world and offers answers that surprise and linger.
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review
pdxannie
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Mehso-so

I loved some stories and others made me ill like old school RL Stine. I love the author‘s imagination. She‘s weird and I love that about her stories. But I probably wouldn‘t read the book again which gives this a rating of so-so.

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lumbricuslibri
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Last book of the month // not even 5 pages in and I‘m already 😳

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Megabooks
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Pickpick

This short story collection, while classified as literary fiction, definitely has some horror elements. Murata explores cannibalism and wearing people‘s skin, bones and teeth. It‘s from the perspective that cremation and the care for bodies after death is strictly a cultural phenomenon, which she subverts. She subverts sexual norms as well in a story where people feast on a dead person then have sex with a stranger in public. Weird but good.

BarbaraBB This sounds very weird! I love the cover though and it is Japanese of course 😉. Beautiful pic too! 2y
Megabooks @BarbaraBB it was definitely weird, but I kind of expected that from Murata. 🤣 thanks re: the picture! 2y
MicheleinPhilly There is someone in my book club who somehow brings every discussion around to cannibalism. She‘s a freak but I should recommend this to her. 2y
See All 12 Comments
squirrelbrain Definitely sounds rather weird, as does your book club friend @MicheleinPhilly ! 😬 2y
MicheleinPhilly @squirrelbrain She‘s more of a strange acquaintance. I prefer my friends be relatively normal. ☺️ (edited) 2y
erzascarletbookgasm I like Japanese weird 😊 2y
Megabooks @MicheleinPhilly that definitely sounds like an odd acquaintance! 🤨🤨 but I do think she‘ll enjoy this, but it may give her too many ideas! 🤣🤣 2y
Megabooks @squirrelbrain it was definitely bizarre! 2y
squirrelbrain Oops @MicheleinPhilly - I should have written ‘friend‘, not friend! 🤣 2y
Cinfhen For me it‘s more weird than good 😁😂 2y
Megabooks @Cinfhen lol! It wouldn‘t be one I‘d recommend to you! 🤣🤣 2y
73 likes4 stack adds12 comments
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lauraisntwilder
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Mehso-so

I really enjoyed about half the stories and the other half...not so much. I *wanted* to like all of them, but I felt like there were a lot of repeated ideas, themes, and storylines from her novel Earthlings that were executed better in the novel.

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MinnieTimperley
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Mehso-so

A collection of 12 very surreal and unsettlingly stories. Murata definitely has an imagination. She seemingly takes taboo ideas around relationships, sexuality, food and the human body and spins her tales around these.
A collection of 12 very surreal and unsettlingly stories. Murata definitely has an imagination. She seemingly takes taboo ideas around relationships, sexuality, food and the human body and spins her tales around these.

MinnieTimperley If you have a delicate stomach this collection may not be for you. That said, the writing is not gratuitous. Murata's style is detached and this results in writing that in less delicate hands could be seen just to have been written for shock value. There are things to be shocked at in these pages but then Murata seems to be leading the reader to reflect on how societal norms influence ideas of acceptability.

2y
47 likes1 comment
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rachelsbrittain
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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July wrap-up! A pretty good month for reading.

Books: 22
Pages: 5,252
Longest: Reprieve (406)
Shortest: All-New Wolvering (34)
BIPOC authors: 12
Female & Enby authors: 18
LGBTQ books: 9
Favorite(s): Life Ceremony and Delilah Green Doesn't Care

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rachelsbrittain
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Pickpick

I loved this collection from the author of Convenience Store Woman and Earthlings. It's just as wonderfully strange and full of unique characters to fall in love with. Definitely some cannibalism too, so do with that what you will 😅 Some standout stories included the title story, A Standout Matetial, Two's Family, The Time of the Large Star, and Hatchling.

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rachelsbrittain
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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My kind of Saturday 😍

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rachelsbrittain
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Baby toes + book

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Bertha_Mason
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata

"Peering closely at the corners of her eyes or mouth, she could see within them flesh the color of blood. She had never thought of these things as her own, but now they felt like charming creatures that had slipped inside her. Did hermit crab shells also think so fondly of the life-forms that crept inside them?"
-"Puzzle"

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Bertha_Mason
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata

"The next thing I knew, I was kneeling on the floor, gripping my cell phone. I badly wanted to call Yamamoto and ask him if it was true that he had died."
-"Life Ceremony"

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Bertha_Mason
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata

"I believed that eating meant being brainwashed by the particular world of the food, and I just couldn‘t bring myself to ingest food from my sister‘s unstable, fictitious world."
-"A Magnificent Spread"

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keepingupwiththepenguins
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Pickpick

Despite (or perhaps because of?) the cannibalism and other assorted taboo-breaking, I loved Life Ceremony just as I expected to. Murata remains a must-read-no-matter-what author for me! Full review: https://keepingupwiththepenguins.com/life-ceremony-sayaka-murata/

58 likes3 stack adds
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rachelsbrittain
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Have been anxiously awaiting these pieces of book mail! Bathe the Cat is unbelievably adorable, and I'm two stories into Life Ceremony and loving it.

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Preciouz29
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
Pickpick

This set of short stories….creepy, touching, funny: as expected from Sayaka Murata. The different stories were all fun and enjoyable, and I think one was a follow up to Convenience Store Woman?

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PNWBookseller85
Life Ceremony: Stories | Sayaka Murata
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Pickpick

Catching up on posts. We‘ve been moving into a new house so it‘s been a little crazy. I‘m a huge Sayaka Murata fan. Her books are so hilarious, brilliant, and uncomfortable. 😂 I love how she‘ll make you question all of the “norms” in society - the most basic human instincts - in the funniest ways. This collection is marvelous.

batsy Oh, nice! I didn't know she had a story collection out. 2y
63 likes1 stack add1 comment