Despite having previously read Isabel Allende’s memoirs, The Japanese Lover is my first
experience with her fiction. I knew that
Allende often uses “magical realism” in her novels, and because of my hit and
miss reaction to that literary device in the past, I was reluctant to give her
fiction much of a chance. Admittedly, The Japanese Lover contains no elements
of magical realism, but it so impressed me with the author’s story-telling
talent that I am looking forward to reading more of her work.
The Japanese Lover is
Alma Belasco’s story. Because of her
parents’ desire to keep her safe, Alma moved in 1939 to San Francisco to live
with her wealthy aunt and uncle just as Poland was on the verge of being overrun
by Nazi Germany. There the little girl
met Ichimei Fukuda, son of the family’s Japanese gardener, and the children almost
immediately formed a bond that would tightly link them together for the rest of
their lives. Alma and Ichimei spent as
much time together as possible until war again intervened in Alma’s life when
the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.
Suddenly Ichimei and his father disappeared, and except for a few highly
censored letters from Ichimei, Alma lost touch with her best friend.
Wars do end, of course, and the survivors try to begin their
lives anew. Alma and Ichimei would find
their lives intersecting again and again over the next several decades but
their love, passionate as it was, was forced to live in the shadows. Interracial love affairs, much less
interracial marriages, were taboo in the culture in which they lived, and that
taboo was not likely to change in time to do the lovers any good.
Author Isabel Allende |
As The Japanese Lover begins,
Alma is living in an extended care facility designed for those approaching the
ends of their lives. No one, including
her grandson Seth, knows her whole story – and she has no intention of sharing
it with anyone. But that changes when
Irina Bazili, a young woman hired to assist the elderly with their daily
routines, comes into Alma’s life. Irina
has a past of her own, one so traumatic that she is finding it impossible to
deal with it successfully. And when the
two women realize just how much they have in common, they reluctantly begin to
share their secrets.
The Japanese Lover
alternates flashbacks and the present to tell the story of these two women, one
of them old and approaching the end of her life, the other young and trying to
deal with the long life she still has ahead of her. In Alma, Ichimei, and Irina, the author has
created three fully-fleshed characters, characters whose lives and experiences
the reader will remember for a long time.
I plan now to explore Allende’s earlier fiction to see what I’ve been
missing all these years.
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