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作者介绍
  • 露丝•尾关
  • Ruth Ozeki
  • 露丝·尾关(Ruth Ozeki)是日美混血的美国获奖电影制片人、小说家、禅宗信徒,1956年3月12日生于康涅狄格州纽黑文,从小说流利的日语,毕业于奈良大学(Nara University)日本文学系,1985年返回纽约,从事电影制片工作。她是一位小说家、电影制片人以及禅宗讲师,著有三部获奖小说《食肉之年》(My Year of Meats)、《大千世界》(All Over Creation)和...
  • 《形与空之书》
  • THE BOOK OF FORM AND EMPTINESS
  • 图书类型:文学小说
  • 者:Ruth Ozeki
  • 出 版 社:Viking/Canongate Books
    代理公司:ANA/Conor
    出版时间:2021年9月
    代理地区:中国大陆、台湾
    页    数:560页
    审读资料:电子稿
  • 人:Rights      浏览次数:512          视频资料

内容简介

这部作品由携《时光的彼岸》(A Tale for the Time Being)入围布克奖(Booker Prize)短名单的作者带来,是一本探讨了失落、成长以及人与物的关系的绮丽多彩又令人耳目一新的小说,。
 
自挚爱的音乐家父亲在悲剧中过世后,十四岁的班尼·欧(Benny Oh)开始听到一些声音。这些声音来自家中的物品----一只球鞋、一个坏掉的圣诞装饰以及一片枯萎的莴苣叶。虽然班尼听不懂它们在说什么,但还是能从语调中感觉到它们的情绪;有些是开心的欢呼,有些是一声轻声的“哼”或“咕”,但有些则带恶意、怒气、或满满的痛苦。当他的母亲开始形成囤积癖,这些声...
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媒体评论

‘Storytelling rarely comes more capacious than Ruth Ozeki’s latest novel . . . Ozeki interconnects zen philosophy, the environmental crisis, a critique of our mass consumer lifestyle and a playful post-modern sensibility — one of the characters is a talking book — within a novel that, for all its wide-ranging intellectual restlessness, remains grounded in its characters’ emotional reality’ 

——Mail on Sunday

 

‘[It’s hard] not to like Ozeki’s calm, dry, methodical good humour and wit, her love affairs with linguistics and jazz and the absurd, her cautious optimism, her gentle parodies . . . What she is best at conveying, though, is the tidal flood of human life and the absurd . . . she makes something so satisfying that it gave me the sense of being addressed not by an author but by a world, one that doesn’t quite exist yet, except in tenuous parallel to ours: a world built out of ideas that spill into the text like a continuous real-time event’ 

——Guardian

 

‘There’s powerful magic here . . . Ozeki is unusually patient with her characters, even the rebarbative ones, and she is able to record the subtle peculiarities of other classes of beings that more overeager writers would probably miss . . . Ozeki gives us a metaphor for our very own American consumption disorder, our love-hate relationship with the stuff we produce and can’t let go of’ 

——New York Times Book Review


‘A masterful meditation on consumer culture…This novel’s meditative pacing perfectly suits its open-hearted contemplation . . . The Book of Form and Emptiness is concerned foremost with the outsiders in our world, the ones who hear voices, who are friendless, who fall into addiction and self-harm. It’s concerned, too, with the ultimate outsiders, the objects that we produce and discard, produce and discard. It is both profound and fun, a loving indictment of our consumer culture. As the novel asks the reader turning the pages, ‘has it ever occurred to you that books have feelings, too?’’ 

——USA Today


‘[A] tale of sorrow, danger and tentative redemption serves as the springboard for extended meditations on the interdependence of all beings, the magic of books, the disastrous ecological and spiritual effects of unchecked consumerism and more . . . one of Ozeki’s gifts as a novelist is the ability to enfold provocative intellectual material within a human story grounded in sharply observed social detail . . . The Book itself has a marvelous voice: adult, ironic, affirming at every turn the importance of books as a repository of humanity’s deepest wisdom and highest aspirations’ 

——Washington Post


‘Ozeki has shifted her readers’ way of perceiving what is ‘normal’ through a sort of slow, capillary action. Her books are not didactic, but they are useful; they’re not mission-driven, but they are richly moral. She writes urgently about the environment—you leave an Ozeki book knowing more about ocean contamination or factory farming—and her novels tend to include a painful parent-child rupture as well as a burbling stream of absurdist humor . . . Ozeki started writing The Book of Form and Emptiness eight years ago, but it is eerily suited to what readers are going through now, a quantum companion to A Tale for the Time Being: If time is part of healing, sorting through matter—through stuff—is part of mourning’ 

——New York Magazine


‘Heartfelt . . . Ozeki, a practicing Buddhist priest, infuses her story with Zen philosophy, using themes of mindfulness and our connection to the living world to highlight pressing modern concerns like climate change, capitalism and the function of art. Inventive, vivid and propelled by a sense of wonder, The Book of Form and Emptiness will delight younger and older readers alike’

——TIME


‘An ambitious and ingenious novel that presents a stinging exploration of grief [and] a reflection on our relationship to objects . . . combine[s] daunting intellectual complexity and accessible big-heartedness . . . The most endearing aspect of Ozeki’s novel is its unabashed celebration of words, writing, and reading . . . Ozeki’s playfulness and zaniness, her compassion and boundless curiosity, prevent the novel from ever feeling stiff or pretentious. Clever without being arch, metafictional without being arcane, dark without being nihilistic, The Book of Form and Emptiness is an exuberant delight’ 

——Boston Globe

 

‘Moving . . . Ozeki has considerable storytelling energies’ 

——Financial Times

 

‘Ozeki is an intelligent and talented writer, capable of presenting us with good scenes and genuine emotions’ 

——Scotsman

 

The Book of Form and Emptiness is both a deeply moving story of family, loss and love, and a provocative lesson in mindfulness and the art of mastering inner peace’ 

——Irish News

 

‘A  vivid story of fraught adolescence, big ideas and humanity’s tenuous hold on a suffering planet . . . Ozeki, an imaginative writer with a subversive sense of humour, has an acute grasp of young people’s contemporary dilemmas . . . She doesn’t offer anything as complete as salvation but something more real: a profound understanding of the human condition and a gift for turning it into literature’ 

——Los Angeles Times

 

The Book of Form and Emptiness is a big, polyphonic, often comic, magical-realist collage of a novel that attempts to interrogate the most pressing issues of the age . . . at its heart is a compelling story of human connection and the redemptive power of art . . . Ozeki is a talented storyteller’ 

——Guardian

 

‘This book ponders the very nature of things . . . Do inanimate items possess a life force? How do we distinguish acute sensitivity from mental illness? These questions fuel a searching novel, one that combines a coming-of-age tale with an ode to the printed page. . . Ozeki’s incisive on matters like consumerism and climate change. Meanwhile, her ruminations on life’s greatest mysteries provide an elegant foundation for an intriguing story’ 

——Star-Tribune


‘In giving the Book a point of view, Ozeki creates a loquacious, animated voice with ideas about other books, the past, the need for human stories and the mutual needs of humans and books. . . With this well-developed voice, Ozeki plays humorously with ideas about what a novel is — about the development of a story, how it gets told, who tells it, who hears it and how books affect people . . . Ozeki, who is a Zen Buddhist priest and filmmaker, takes up big ideas about this moment on our planet, but also offers close descriptions of memorable images that make the prose absorbing . . . These images reverberate long after the reading, speaking to Ozeki’s broad and benign vision of connected beings’ 

——Seattle Times


‘On the surface, Ozeki’s novel is about a grief-stricken family struggling to find meaning in the aftermath of a tragedy. But dig deeper and the story is an intricately layered commentary on modern society and the significance it puts on material objects, a study on subjectivity and the nature of reality. All the while, it’s a book about the unknown, all-knowing realms of the imagination…When spending time in Ozeki’s world, the empirically provable and quantifiable become less important, and the truths of our inner lives grow louder, if only we can honor those voices’ 

——Japan Times


‘Spectacular . . . this novel is filled with hope, compassion and more than a little wonder . . . Ozeki’s books consistently nourish the soul’ 

——Shelf Awareness (starred)


‘With all confidence, I can say that The Book of Form and Emptiness is very real. It’s a wonderful, heartwarming story of emotional growth filled with characters as real as anyone you would meet on the street. Except we are meeting them through the Book. And the Book, as we learn, knows all’ 

——Washington Independent Review of Books


‘A great premise, one that perfectly captures how it feels to be a child falling into a lifelong love of reading. It’s a book for book people, exploring how books can offer meaning and – in this case, literally – speak to us’ 

——BookPage


‘A meditative tribute to books, libraries, and Zen wisdom’ 

——Kirkus

 

‘Ozeki is a skilled storyteller and the journey she takes us on is deadpan hilarious, heart-touching and ultimately hopeful’ 

——Spectator


“In an extraordinary year for fiction written by women, and from an incredibly strong shortlist, we were thrilled to choose Ruth Ozeki’s The Book of Form and Emptiness, which stood out for its sparkling writing, warmth, intelligence, humour and poignancy. A celebration of the power of books and reading, it tackles big issues of life and death, and is a complete joy to read. Ruth Ozeki is a truly original and masterful storyteller.” 

—— 2022 Chair of Judges Mary Ann Sieghart

相关资料

Watch the moment Ruth Ozeki was announced as the winner on the Women’s Prize website:

www.womensprizeforfiction.co.uk/features/features/news/announcing-the-2022-winner-of-the-womens-prize

 

The news was reported in:

Guardian: www.theguardian.com/books/2022/jun/15/ruth-ozeki-women-prize-for-fiction-the-book-of-form-and-emptiness

Daily Mail: www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/pa/article-10921005/Ruth-Ozeki-says-winning-Women-s-Prize-Fiction-wonderful-product.html

Bookseller: www.thebookseller.com/news/masterful-ruth-ozeki-wins-2022-womens-prize-for-fiction

BBC News: www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-61808113

Independent: www.independent.co.uk/extras/indybest/books/fiction-books/womens-prize-for-fiction-winner-ruth-ozeki-b2101531.html

Evening Standard: www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/womens-prize-for-fiction-the-duchess-of-cornwall-mary-ann-sieghart-pulitzer-prize-pandora-sykes-b1006422.html

Irish News: www.irishnews.com/magazine/entertainment/2022/06/15/news/ruth-ozeki-s-the-book-of-form-and-emptiness-wins-women-s-prize-for-fiction-2744552/

iNews: https://inews.co.uk/culture/books/womens-prize-for-fiction-2022-winner-ruth-ozeki-zen-buddhist-priest-168


Unsurprisingly from all the reviews above, The Book of Form and Emptiness by Ruth Ozeki was one of the best reviewed books as highlighted in Book Marks:

https://bookmarks.reviews/reviews/the-book-of-form-and-emptiness/

 

Ruth Ozeki was interviewed in Harper’s Bazaar about The Book of Form and Emptiness:

https://www.harpersbazaar.com/uk/culture/culture-news/a37441558/ruth-ozeki-book-of-form-and-emptiness/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Lit%20Hub%20Daily:%20September%2027%2C%202021&utm_term=lithub_master_list


Vulture published a profile of Ruth Ozeki:

https://www.vulture.com/article/ruth-ozeki-profile.html

版权状态

版权已授:澳大利亚、巴西、加拿大、法国、德国、以色列、意大利、韩国、立陶宛、葡萄牙、罗马尼亚、俄罗斯、西班牙、土耳其、阿拉伯、美国、印度尼西亚
本书中文繁体版已授权

获奖信息

Women’s Prize for Fiction 2022!