Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review“Kenny Fries writes out of the pure hot emergency of a mortal being trying to keep himself alive. So much is at stake here—health, affection, culture, trauma, language—but its greatest surprise is what thrives in the midst of suffering. A beautiful book.”—Paul Lisicky, author of
The Narrow Door“In this subtle page turner, Fries helps reinvent the travel-as-pilgrimage narrative. He neither exoticizes nor shies away from the potential pitfalls of a Western mind traveling abroad; instead he demonstrates how, through an all-too-rare open heart and a true poet’s eye, bridges can be built and understanding deepened, one sincere action at a time.”—Marie Mutsuki Mockett, author of
Where the Dead Pause, and the
Japanese Say Goodbye“Deeply moving and exquisitely written about many things—cultural and physical difference, sexuality, love, loss, mortality, and the ephemeral nature of beauty and art—and a love letter to Japan.”— Mira Bartók, author of
The Memory Palace“Not your typical AIDS memoir. . . . It’s also a book about living with a life-long disability, living in a unique and vastly different culture than one’s own. . . . Fries offers compelling insight into Japanese culture. Perhaps from a lifetime spent on the outside looking in, he shines in his understanding of and his perspective on the human condition.” — John Francis Leonard, A&U
“An achingly beautiful and intricately-woven personal narrative…. Fries’ prose shines with a honed and brightly polished clarity—each phrase hangs heavy with meaning, reduced only to what is necessary, a world in of itself. . . . to read it is to experience what true literary achievement really means.”—Julia Bouwsma, Connotation Press
“Absorbing, moving and intensely human. . . . In the unsettled and often angry world of disability politics, Kenny Fries' memoir enters centre stage, projecting an oasis of calm and insightful enquiry.”—Wordgathering
Table of Contents
- Prologue: In the Province of the Gods
- I. Floating
- One: Genkan
- Two: Fortune
- Three: Barrier Free
- Four: Foreign Affairs
- Five: Mono no Aware
- Six: Physical Facts
- Seven: A Mountain of Skulls and Candlelit Graves
- Eight: An Infected Throat and a Healing Tree
- Nine: Borrowing the Hills
- II. Away
- One: Before
- Two: After
- III. World
- One: Survivals
- Two: A Pair of One-Winged Birds
- Three: History Being Created, or What the Leech Child Says
- Four: Rare and Uncommon Beings
- Five: Bubbling Water
- Six: My Japan
- Seven: Before and After
- Eight: Positive Effects
- Nine: New Stories in an Ancient Land
- Epilogue: Procession
- Acknowledgments
- Suggested Readings