chicks review:
My Year of Meats

home | reviews | fiction







browse by type:

african-american
american
asian
asian-american
sf bay area
canadian
caribbean
children's
czech
drama
east-european
fantasy
general fiction
french
german
indian
irish
italian
latino/a
lgbt
lit crit
magic realism
memoirs
from the midwest
mystery
native american
new yorker
from new england
romance
russian
science fiction
short stories
from the south
from the southwest
spanish
uk
from the west
women

My Year of Meats
In Association with Amazon.com Ruth Ozeki
PB list price $12.95
Viking Press (April 1999)
ISBN: 0140280464
366 pages

average review:


Reviews:
This gets: a from eryka:
This is a GREAT book. It has two protagonists: one is a Japanese-American woman (Jane) who is an aspiring filmmaker, and the other (Akiko) is an abused and anorexic Japanese housewife. Jane films American families cooking and eating meat so it can be exported to Japan, since Europe no longer imports American meat, while Akiko is married to Jane's boss. Their stories parallel and intersect with one another, as the two of them grow and start to respect themselves and their own strengths. Great.



From the back cover:

When Jane Takagi-Little finally lands a job—producing a Japanese television show sponsored by BEEF-EX, an organization promoting the export of U.S. meats—she takes her crew on the road in search of all-American wives cooking all-American meat. Over the course of filming, though, Jane makes a few troubling discoveries about both. Meanwhile, on the other side of the globe, in Japan, Akiko Ueno watches My American Wife! and diligently prepares Coca-Cola Roast and Panfried Prairie Oysters for her husband, "John," (the ad-agency rep for the show’s sponsor). As Akiko fills out his questionnaires, rating each show on Authenticity, Wholesomeness, and Deliciousness of Meat, certain ominous questions about her own life—and the fact that after each meal she has to go to the bathroom and throw up—begin to surface.

A tale of love, global media, and the extraordinary events in the lives of two ordinary women, counterpointed by Sei Shonagon’s vibrant commentary, this first novel by filmmaker Ruth L. Ozeki—as insightful and moving as the novels of Amy Tan, as original as Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. or John Irving—is a sparkling and original debut from a major new talent.

eryka.com scale:

So good you just can't stand it.
Almost that good.
Sort of good.
Generally a waste of time.
Destined for the recycler.


If you'd like to review this book, or another, click here




Similar books by category:

asian-american writers | women writers |
american fiction


Go home | Go to reviews home

© 2002 eryka.com. All rights reserved.