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Abe Kōbō: The woman in the dunes (1973, Charles E. Tuttle)

239 pages

English language

Published 1973 by Charles E. Tuttle.

ISBN:
978-4-8053-0207-1
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OCLC Number:
17522108

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A young entomologist, trapped in a sandpit with an attractive widow, finds he is a prisoner.

9 editions

Buried Beneath Sand, I Discovered Questions That Would Not Let Go

Rarely have I encountered a novel that transformed an ordinary landscape into such a powerful meditation on human existence. The Woman in the Dunes by Kōbō Abe stands as a remarkable work of existential literature, using an isolated setting to explore freedom, identity, and the meaning of routine. From the opening pages, I felt that I was entering a world governed by unfamiliar rules, where every handful of sand carried symbolic weight.

The story follows Niki Jumpei, an amateur entomologist who becomes trapped in a deep sand pit after visiting a remote village. Forced to live with a widowed woman whose daily survival depends on endlessly removing drifting sand, he initially devotes all his energy to escape. As I followed his struggle, I felt both his frustration and his determination. The seemingly endless labor appeared meaningless at first, yet it gradually revealed deeper questions about purpose and adaptation.

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Subjects

  • Entomologists -- Japan -- Fiction
  • Prisoners -- Japan -- Fiction
  • Sand dunes -- Japan -- Fiction
  • Women -- Japan -- Fiction