

In Strange Weather in Tokyo it was the descriptions of food and the cherry blossom that heralds the arrival of spring that permeated, whereas in The Nakano Thrift Shop it is the inconsequential bric-a-brac and the minutiae of life that you eventually cherish.

Kawakami has an extraordinarily way of drawing you into her etherial world where, although nothing really happens, when they do, little transgressions or events cause ripples that spread seamlessly throughout the whole book and stay with you long after the story has finished. Called Hitomi, our heroine and narrator not so much drifts through life as life drifts through her, as Kawakami’s small cast of characters – Mr Nakano, the roguish womanising thrift shop owner Masayo, his artistic, doll-making, older sister Sakiko, Mr Nakano’s sensual and beautiful lover and the awkwardly shy Takeo -all gently impinge on Hitomi’s consciousness. In The Nakano Thrift Shop, Hiromi’s narrator is again a young woman, this time one who kind of hesitantly -tentatively, possibly – falls in love with the twenty-something Takeo, her co-worker at Mr Nakano’s thrift shop. The Nakano Thrift Shop treads a similar path. Hiromi Kawakami’s first English language book was called Strange Weather in Tokyo and published in 2014 (in Japan it was titled The Teacher’s Briefcase), and was a gentle, touching, almost surreal and dreamlike story of a thirty-something woman slowly falling in love with an unassuming retired school teacher in his seventies who she sees in a café where she eats regularly.
