Reviews

The Face of Another by Kōbō Abe

pr1y4's review against another edition

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4.0

3.5 ish i think

firstly if you liked No Longer Human and want to read something more challenging, this book is perfect for that - the metaphor of having a ‘mask’ is more literal in this book, but in many ways it follows the same essential plot and themes.

the concept of having a mask on and essentially hiding your true self has been a really prevalent theme in my life right now (which is why i read no longer human and this back to back) and it’s interesting to see that theme being portrayed in a more straightforward, almost scientific way. it provokes a lot of thought around what it means to have a ‘face’ in society and how there are certain ‘masks’ that are more acceptable than others. the treatment of the masked person has a third entity in the book is quite interesting.

although, i don’t necessarily like the way this book ends in that it’s a pessimistic ending where the narrator has used his exclusion from normal society to become a bitter vengeful person and essentially ends up SAing his wife and then berating and blaming her for it.

anyways yeah idk good book i guess

yumeshi's review against another edition

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1.0

I couldn't decide how many stars to give this book. I have to say, that I didn't like it, which is also what 1 star should mean. But just because I didn't like it doesn't mean, that this book is bad. It definitely isn't. It just isn't my cup of tea. There were some interesting ideas though. But I hated the protagonist's way of thinking.
In the end I ended up giving it 1*, but it is definitely NOT a bad book.

rouge_red's review

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reflective slow-paced

3.5

I watched the movie adaptation a year or two ago and I really enjoyed it. The movie hits many of the same beats, but it involves the doctor (mentioned early on in the development in the mask) and his nurse assistant to a larger extent. I liked the last bit of the story where he tries to test out the efficacy of the mask by trying to seduce his wife as the "masked man", giving into his sexual urges. The discussion surrounding the narrator's idea that he is a different person when he dons the mask was pretty fascinating, as was his wife's and the yoyo girl's ability to clearly see through his disguise. Which then massively throws him off his game. Overall this was a good book; a little over serious for me, but it makes sense for the character. It sounds like Abe wrote other books with strange premises, so maybe we'll try something else.

giova2394's review

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challenging reflective fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

sky_reaper's review

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3.0

I assumed facelessness equates to freedom, but then again, I'd realized it's just freedom from dependency on human connection and relationship. The idea of losing responsibility to explain and be seen, turning to be a spectator of a scene that is your life. A renegade.

On the other hand, nothing could be further from the truth that this anonymity only gives us a deeper sense of loneliness and/or solitude that sets up deep apart like a crevice that is unknown, unheard, and unseen from anyone else -- and nothing could be more painful than to be a disconnected soul.

The existential treatment made by the author to explore the identity and its crisis could be further related to our current situation brought by modern technology. I won't be furthering it much, but I'd enjoyed reading it from the first notebook and the letter of the wife in the third one.

I'd still remember the quaint feeling of reading The Box Man a few odd years ago in our university library. It has this same faint vibe on the theme, but I think I'd like the former as better than this one.

_myliteraryobsession's review

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3.0

This is one of those books that I read in high hopes of becoming enlightened and educated in the process of flicking though each page. The Face of Another details the life of a mad scientist left horribly disfigured after an experiment gone wrong. With his face wrapped tight in bandages, he comes to the harsh realisation that since his accident both his career and marriage are failing.

He seeks out a man specialising in realistic and prosthetic masks, utilising this 'new face' to re-shape his identity and in the process fool his wife into having an affair with him, (hoping all the while that she won't discover his true identity).

Throughout this novel you can't help feeling sympathetic towards this man, however you also feel for his wife, the real victim here, pulled into a complex case of identity crisis.

It's a novel that makes you think, constantly exploring the concept of identity. Kobe Abe is a Japanese writer that reminds me a lot of Jean Paul Sartre in both style and approach. I enjoyed this novel but I was thankful that it was only a short read. The plot does tend to drag at times.

lillismith's review

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3.0

Dense as all fuck

brainemptyjust's review against another edition

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dark mysterious reflective tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.75

bethuuul's review

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challenging dark tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5


Expand filter menu Content Warnings

hespio's review against another edition

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3.0

Po přečtení Abeho knihy všude písek jsem se konečně po více než roce rozhodla pokračovat dílem všude obličeje. Musím říct, že ačkoliv se i Tvář toho druhého zařadí k mým oblíbeným dílům moderní japonské literatury, Písečná žena na mě přece jen zapůsobila lépe. Zatímco v obsesi pískem jsem jasně viděla různorodé přemýšlení nad obecným udělem lidí, které mě do sebe vtáhlo, ve Tváři toho druhého mě hlavní postava svými sebestřednými, 5Head výlevy už asi tak v polovině knihy omrzela. Proto taky nejspíš s mým prožitkem z knížky silně rezonovala věta, která se objevila na jejím konci.

Spoiler"Byla to pravdu strašná zpověď. Připadala jsem si jako násilím položená na operační stůl, třebaže mi nic nescházelo, a slepě rozpitvávána nesčetnými druhy skalpelů a nůžek prapodivných tvarů, jejichž použití a smysl jsem vůbec nechápala."


Rozumím, že se tímto nejspíš trochu míjím s pointou celého vyprávění, ale kdykoliv se hlavní hrdina zase vytasil s nějakou světobornou hypotézou, která ho napadla, když narazil na nějaký problém, v podvědomí mi zněla jediná věta:
Spoilerproč si sakra teda neudělal masku, která by vypadala jako jeho původní obličej.


Už mám ale v plánu si za několik let knihu přečíst znova, myslím si, že to určitě bude stát za to, přestože mě už dopředu nebude pohánět element napětí toho, co se nakonec stane.