From the Publisher
Previous winner of two Booker Prizes, Peter Carey expands his
extraordinary achievement with each new novel - but now gives us
something entirely different.
When famously shy Charley Carey becomes obsessed with Japanese
manga and anime, Peter is not only delighted for his son, but
entranced himself. Thus, with a father sharing his
twelve-year-old's exotic comic books, begins a journey that will
lead them both to Tokyo, where a strange Japanese boy will become
both their guide and judge. The visitors quickly plunge deep into
the lanes of Shitimachi - into the "weird stuff" of modern Japan -
meeting manga artists and anime directors, "visualists" who
painstakingly impersonate cartoons, and solitary "otakus" who lead
a computerized existence. What emerges from these encounters is a
pithy, far-ranging study of history and culture both high and low -
from samurai to salaryman, from kabuki theatre to the post-war
robot craze. Peter Carey's observations are provocative, even
though his hosts often point out, politely, that he is wrong about
Japan. In adventures that are comic, surprising, and ultimately
moving, father and son cope with and learn from each other in a
place far from home.
"No Real Japan," said Charley. "You've got to promise. No
temples. No museums."
"What could we do?"
"We could buy cool manga."
"There'll be no English translations."
"I don't care. I'd eat raw fish."
-excerpt from Wrong About Japan
From the Jacket
Previous winner of two Booker Prizes, Peter Carey expands his
extraordinary achievement with each new novel -- but now gives us
something entirely different.
When famously shy Charley Carey becomes obsessed with Japanese
manga and anime, Peter is not only delighted for his son, but
entranced himself. Thus, with a father sharing his
twelve-year-old''s exotic comic books, begins a journey that will
lead them both to Tokyo, where a strange Japanese boy will become
both their guide and judge. The visitors quickly plunge deep into
the lanes of Shitimachi -- into the "weird stuff" of modern Japan
-- meeting manga artists and anime directors, "visualists" who
painstakingly impersonate cartoons, and solitary "otakus" who lead
a computerized existence. What emerges from these encounters is a
pithy, far-ranging study of history and culture both high and low
-- from samurai to salaryman, from kabuki theatre to the post-war
robot craze. Peter Carey''s observations are provocative, even
though his hosts often point out, politely, that he is wrong about
Japan. In adventures that are comic, surprising, and ultimately
moving, father and son cope with and learn from each other in a
place far from home.
""No Real Japan," said Charley. "You''ve got to promise. No
temples. No museums."
"What could we do?"
"We could buy cool manga."
"There''ll be no English translations."
"I don''t care. I''d eat raw fish."
--excerpt from Wrong About Japan
About the Author
Peter Carey is the author of eight novels, including the Booker
Prize-winning Oscar and Lucinda and True
History of the Kelly Gang, and, most recently, My
Life as a Fake. Born in Australia in 1943, Carey now lives
in New York City.