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263 reviews for:

Chá e Amor

Yasunari Kawabata

3.55 AVERAGE

reflective relaxing sad fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

It's scary how well all of the ghosts linger, in memories, the cups of tea, the ceremonies themselves. The lingering mystery that sticks to the reader at the end . . . perfectly done. The fact that so much remains opaque to us
-- Chikako's motives being financial, spite, good-will towards her own ghosts; Mrs Ota's thoughts in sleeping with her dead lover's son, his potential union with her daughter; would Fumiko end her life in the same way her 'despised' mother did? Did Fumiko know and/or present any chance for Mrs Ota to commit her death, this woman she loved and felt so disappointed in?
The rigid withholding is so much of the magic of this book.  Recommend for anybody willing to read about people bending towards one another and death, simultaneously.

The cover art is also gorgeous; I have a guess to who is who, but the work itself is worth mentioning. 

-moody and strange
-tea tea tea
-i liked

I read it in one go. I'm really amazed at Kawabata's gift for simplicity and reduction, only what's absolutely necessary in the form of words remains in this book.
dark emotional mysterious reflective medium-paced
emotional fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

it was fascinating to explore a culture so different from my own!
(book 5 of my 2020 reading rush!)

Started reading this novella what feels like ages ago. It is a short story, descriptive and interesting with several deaths (including suicide) central to the story. The descriptions of tea ceremonies and the accoutrements, such as tea bowls, are interesting.

For my own part, a death in my family delayed my completion, but picking it back up, the story is compelling, with beautiful descriptions, and not emotionally overwhelming.

***1/2

"Nu hij zijn eigen vader en Fumiko's moeder in de twee kommen terugzag kreeg Kikuji het gevoel of er twee glanzend schone geestverschijningen naast elkaar waren gezet."

Een opmerkelijke korte roman die even eenvoudig als complex aanvoelt en je, veel meer nog dan 'Sneeuwlandschap' en 'De schone slaapsters', confronteert met een fundamenteel verschillende cultuur. In essentie draait het boek om theeceremonies, of, nog meer specifiek, de objecten die daarbij gebruikt worden. Maar natuurlijk staan die ook voor (overleden) mensen en wordt er geworsteld met jaloezie, wraak, liefde en schuld. Intrigerend, en Kawabata's elegantie en beheersing zijn instant herkenbaar, maar je blijft opgescheept met het gevoel heel wat ongeschreven nuances en codes te missen, wat de intenties en reacties van de personages soms verwarrend maakt.
dark emotional tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes