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丕賱毓丕卮賯 丕賱賷丕亘丕賳賷

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鬲鬲毓乇賮 廿賷乇賷賳丕 丕賱鬲賷 鬲毓賲賱 賮賷 賲兀賵賶 賱賱賲爻賳賷賳 賮賷 爻丕賳 賮乇丕賳爻賷爻賰賵 毓賱賶 兀賱賲丕 賵丨賮賷丿賴丕 爻賷鬲貙 賵鬲丨丕賵賱 廿賷乇賷賳丕 亘賲爻丕毓丿丞 爻賷鬲 丕賰鬲卮丕賮 賲賳 賷乇爻賱 锘焚勝呚� 鬲賱賰 丕賱乇爻丕卅賱 賵丕賱賴丿丕賷丕 丕賱爻乇賷丞責

賴匕賴 賯氐丞 鬲丨亘爻 丕锘焚嗁佖ж池� 毓賳 丕賱丨亘 賵丕賱鬲囟丨賷丞 賵孬亘賵鬲 丕锘坟ж迟娯� 賮賷 毓丕賱賲 賲賮噩毓 賱丕 賷鬲賵賯賮 毓賳 丕賱鬲賯賱亘.

376 pages, Paperback

First published May 28, 2015

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About the author

Isabel Allende

222books42.8kfollowers
Isabel Allende Llona is a Chilean-American novelist. Allende, who writes in the "magic realism" tradition, is considered one of the first successful women novelists in Latin America. She has written novels based in part on her own experiences, often focusing on the experiences of women, weaving myth and realism together. She has lectured and done extensive book tours and has taught literature at several US colleges. She currently resides in California with her husband. Allende adopted U.S. citizenship in 2003.

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5 stars
26,262 (28%)
4 stars
37,207 (40%)
3 stars
22,633 (24%)
2 stars
5,190 (5%)
1 star
1,396 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 9,345 reviews
Profile Image for Brina.
1,217 reviews4 followers
June 18, 2017
I fell in love with Isabel Allende's writing when I was in high school. I still remember the first sentence of the first book I ever read of her's: "Barrabas came to us by sea". At the time Allende wrote sweeping historical novels that predominately took place in her native land Chile. Yet, her writing style changed in the many years she has been in the United States, branching out to write crime novels and even some books geared toward young adults. The passion she wrote with in books like House of the Spirits and Eva Luna had been lost.

With The Japanese Lover, for me the epic multigenerational passionate novel has been rekindled. Here we meet Alma Belasco nee Mendel an octogenarian who is living out the rest of her days in Lark House retirement center in San Francisco. Assigned to her is young Irina Bazili who becomes her personal aid and assistant. The parallels between the two women is that they are both immigrants who fled Eastern Europe as young children to escape horrid conditions, Alma from the ravages of the Holocaust and Irina from post communist Romania. Both women are somehow haunted by their past and it takes nearly the entire novel for them to trust each other enough to confide their secrets with one another.

In 1940s America interracial romance was taboo. Young Alma Mendel had been in love with Ichimei Fukada, the son of her family's gardener, from the time they were both eight years old. From that moment on, Alma wanted to marry Ichimei but knew that they shared a forbidden love. Allende also touches on this theme with two other couples: Ichimei's sister Mugami and Boyd as well as Irina and Alma's grandson Seth in present time. It is obvious to me that this is an issue that effects Allende strongly. In the end, Alma realizes that she and Ichimei would have to live apart in their various communities and ends up marrying her cousin Nathaniel Belasco. It is Ichimei, however, whose love endures for her entire life.

In present times Alma's grandson Seth has decided to write a book about his grandmother's life while she is still lucid enough to share her memories. He enlists Irina to share this task and falls in love with her immediately. Irina then has to confront her own grimy past, which becomes the novel's subplot.

When Alma finally decides to tell Seth and Irina about her and Ichimei's relationship one afternoon in Lark House, I realized that Allende has rekindled the magic that I grew to love with her first sweeping novels. Flashbacks interspersed with present times with the reader captivated until the end. This is the Allende that I fell in love with when I read House of the Spirits for the first time. The Japanese Lover is almost at that same level of magical realism. I hope as Allende enters the twilight of her own writing career that the magic spark is here to stay. I am looking forward to her next epic novel and highly recommend this one to all.
Profile Image for Julie.
Author听6 books2,242 followers
February 21, 2024
Oh, I haven't so agonized over a review in such a long time.

Here's the thing. There is a part of me that wondered, "If this wasn't Isabel Allende, would this book ever have been published?" It's pages and pages and pages of exposition. A held-at-arm's-distance recitation of characters' histories, loves, lives, and losses, interspersed with patinated scenes of an assisted living center for geriatric WASP hippies in the woods a comfortable, but convenient, distance from San Francisco. There's little of the jagged edge, the edge of the cliff, the wild tear of passion, that so made me fall in love with Allende's writing twenty-plus years ago. I wondered about all the books by authors who write from raw and dangerous places that publishers might pass by for the sure sale of another Allende.

But. But. What held me to the sofa on a stormy near-winter's day, unable to set this aside until the end? Okay, so I had a fever, I was exhausted, I need to rest my body and my brain. I needed desperately to be swept away and The Japanese Lover was just what the doctor would have ordered. Had I sought a medical opinion, that is. This is comfort food, literary warm rice pudding, soothing, rich, sentimental.

Alma Belasco and Irina Bazili are both immigrants to the United States, but they arrived generations and tragedies apart. Alma was sent as a young girl to live out World War II with wealthy relatives, escaping the decimation of her native Poland and eradication of her family by Nazi Germany. Decades later, pre-teen Irina lands in Texas from Moldova, finally reunited with a mother who'd escaped sexual slavery in Turkey. Whereas Alma lives a silver-spoon life in a mansion overlooking San Francisco Bay, Irina's formative years are a horror show, a secret revealed deep into the book's narrative.

The two women find each other at Lark House, a retirement center and assisted living community for the patchouli-and-pranayama set. Irina is hired as a caregiver and after proving herself to be a model of patience and discretion, Alma hires her as a personal assistant. It is then, through the gentle prodding of Alma's grandson, Seth, who develops a patronizing crush on Irina, that the story of Alma's "Japanese Lover" takes shape.

Reading this novel, which is built around the flashback love story of Alma and Ichimei, the son of her uncle's gardener, at a time when Donald Trump is proclaiming we must refuse entry to Muslims and register those already on American soil, was heartrending. The novel wakes up and shake off its velvet glove when Allende takes us into the concentration camps where Americans of Japanese origin were held captive during the war.

Aging is naturally a significant theme in The Japanese Lover, presented with tenderness, humor, and grace. Clearly, Allende herself is grappling with the indignities of aging, the physical and emotional losses, the abandonment of ability, mind, friends and family, but she offers models of the elderly living with determination and vibrancy, albeit enormous privilege.

The Japanese Lover is a big-hearted, adorable, poignant read, filled with lovely images and vital themes. Three-and-a-half stars rounded up to four because life is too short to quibble.
Profile Image for Angela M .
1,397 reviews2,129 followers
November 9, 2015
4.5 stars .
At its core , this is a love story that spans decades, but it is about so much more . It's about surviving, about aging, about forbidden love , about the depth of caring and friendship that allows loved ones to seek their own happiness without reproach . Jews fleeing the Nazi occupation of Poland, the war, Japanese internment camps in the United States are part of the unfolding story of an elderly woman coming to terms with and reliving her past . But in the present she is instrumental in helping a young woman who bears the emotional scars of a horrible childhood that keep her from moving forward with her life .

Life in Lark House , a home for the aging is both funny and sad with its unconventional residents . This is where Alma Balasco at eighty years old has chosen to live even though she is a woman of means with a large beautiful estate. It is here that she meets Irina . The story alternates between the present with Alma working on the Belasco family history with her grandson Seth and Irina, whom she has hired as her assistant and Alma's earlier life when she is first sent to America from Poland. As a young girl she meets Ichimei Fukuda , the son of her aunt's gardener and her life is forever changed . The novel also contains sections covering the Fukuda family's experience in a Japanese internment camp reflecting on this difficult time in our history for Japanese immigrants and their American born children. These are interspersed with letters from Ichimei to Alma through the years .

This might easily have been 5 stars for me . Allende's wonderful story telling mixed with a bit of the magical was reminiscent of her earlier writing . Even though I cared about the characters from the beginning, the sparse dialog between the characters made it difficult for me at first to feel their connections with each other . It took a while for that to happen , but it eventually did . This is a wonderful story that will move Allende fans and create new ones .

Thanks to Atria Books and NetGalley.
Profile Image for Nan Williams.
1,639 reviews96 followers
December 29, 2015
Was this novel really written by the same woman who thrilled me with "Island beneath the Sea," "Zorro," "Portrait in Sepia," "Daughter of Fortune," "House of the Spirits?"
Somehow I find that hard to believe.

Rather than putting her "beautifully drawn characters" into history, the book just throws every societal ill of the last 75 years at the reader. It reads like the writer was handed a catalog of things which must be included. First we start with the Nazi invasion of Poland and subsequent emigration of children (and of course, their parents were incarcerated in the Warsaw Ghetto and later taken to extermination). Parallel to that we have both the incarceration of Japanese Americans into camps in the American West and communism in Romania/Moldavia resulting in human sex trafficking. We have young girls being sold into slavery for the brothels of Turkey. And I guess, parallel to that we have the child porn industry in the US and Canada. Whew! Let's see, what else? Oh well, the requisite racial barriers between Japanese and Whites and if all that were not enough, we have homeless Romanian cats and dogs being brought [illegally?] into California for adoption.

Other "societal ills" that were covered included illegal abortion, assisted suicide, homosexuality, death from AIDS ... gosh, have I left anything out? Nothing was left out of this book, that's for sure!

"Beautifully drawn characters" as in the past novels? Absolutely not! The characters in this novel are mere caricatures. They are very much over-drawn to the point of the ridiculous. For example, our protagonist, Alma, is living in wealth and opulence. But when she and her Japanese lover decide to have regular meetings, where do they do it? In a run-down, rat and roach infested motel. And I guess the parallel to this is our 2nd leading lady, Irina, who holds down 3 responsible jobs, but yet lives in a rat infested rent-controlled hovel without bathing facilities. She showers at the geriatric facility where she works.

And then there is the all important timeline. The author (ghost writer?) skips back and forth constantly giving background information on absolutely everyone. This is very disconcerting. Just when you think the plot is actually going somewhere, you find yourself in a prison camp in Europe in 1943 (or in California) or with our protagonist in Boston in college.

The plot? The story? I didn't find one. This was simply a mish-mash of [mostly sordid] events thrown together between the covers of a book.

This is a very poorly written novel and is not worthy of Isabel Allende.
Profile Image for Debbie W..
906 reviews792 followers
February 9, 2022
Why I chose to read this book:
1. I have been a fan of 's writing style for many years; and,
2. my hold on this audiobook became available on Overdrive. 馃帀

Positives:
1. Allende comes through again with her strong characters! They really come to life as their mysterious pasts become revealed;
2. the dual timeline works extremely well in that all of the characters' interactions are relevant to the overall story;
3. historical research into different events is well-detailed! The sections about the Japanese internment camps strongly reminded me of those written about in ;
4. narrator does a phenomenal job! She kept me entranced throughout: and,
5. the description of various seniors living in the nursing home (this really felt personal as my mom and mother-in-law live(d) in one), Irina's grandparents' demise and Alma's deathbed scene with Ichi all brought on the waterworks! 馃槶

I can understand why some readers may find the character of Alma unlikeable. Do I morally agree with some of her life choices? No. But Allende still created such a vibrant character to make me want to continue listening to this fine tale.

A MUST READ for Allende fans!
Profile Image for Elyse Walters.
4,010 reviews11.7k followers
December 26, 2015
Imagine for a moment ......being 8 years old.
My 8 year old memory includes loss. My father and both grandparents were no longer living.
That 8 year old memory includes loss of the new custom home my parents built that we were about to move in a week before he died....then a week later a major flood & mud slide destroyed every house ( all new developments)...'except' ours. However, my mother backed out...and never moved us into that new home.
I remember feelings of fear when we first moved into an apartment complex.

Now imagine the loss for 8 year old, Alma Mendel, in Isabel Allende's book, "The Japanese Lover".
Alma remembers loss of her 'mother' and 'country'. Her mother was worried about invasion in Poland, and sends her to America to live with her sister.
Alma grows up in San Francisco in a wealthy family, 'the Belascos'. It was there - when she first met Ichimei Fukuda, also 8 years old. Ichimei was was the gardeners youngest son. They become young childhood friends.
The relationship between Alma and Ichimei is complicated - with years of changes and aging. Ichimei was sent to the Japanese internment camp after the attack on Pearl Harbor...while Alma lives with freedom. There are love letters between Alma and Ichimei. Alma reads them over and over. Yet... there are other friendships and interests... reminding me how the aging cycles are like squares of history on a quilt ...each square telling a different story.

Irina, also experienced loss at a young age...having immigrated from Soviet Moldavia.
Irina & Alma, both Jewish, both immigrants, may be separated by approx. 40 years in age...but they shared a similar story. "The Japanese Lover" is primarily Alma's story, yet both women had secrets & painful memories.
Alma's cousin Nathaniel and a friend Lenny will explain some of those secrets soon enough.
Irina becomes Alma's assistant ( with the help of Alma's grandson Seth), ...an unfolding of past history comes to the surface. While Irina and Seth work together, a relationship between them is growing......(a new love story emerging?)

Isabel Allende's new novel takes place - mostly-in an upscale - assisted living type complex in San Francisco, called 'The Lark House'. Flashback style storytelling. Alma is in her 80's ...is a talented artist, wealthy, and healthy. Isabel is is in her 20's, charming and popular attending to the elderly residents.

As in a past recent novel, , "Ripper", we see the terrific sense of humor Isabel Allende has. Her 'very' contemporary novel, "Ripper", also took place in SF with very quirky-hysterical characters. In 'The Lark House'... we see a little of 'the hippie' generation again ... and enjoy some quirky old geezers.

Not to fear, though....
... for traditional 'oldie' fans of Allende...this book is not "Ripper", ( probably her most controversial book....with many negative reviews - yet I gave it a 'very high' review, as I thought it was kick-ass-FUN)... This novel has plenty of scrumptious details with strong complex characters, staggering storytelling, 'family separation/abandonment', love, loss, death, a love story, and themes of aging, ....( not for the weak).

Long time Isabel Allende fans often forget... "The Bay Area" has been Isabel's home for most of her adult years. She hasn't been primarily a Chilean novelist for many years. I've enjoyed her varied books. From New Orleans to a lost teenager in Berkeley, etc... I'm ready for just about anything this tiny powerhouse woman throws my way.
The biggest change in Isabel's writing was after her daughter Paula died.
In that autobiography, "Paula", - which she wrote 'while' her daughter was ill... was the most amazing story - packed filled with childhood memories of Isabel growing up in her country. History about her families political roles, etc. Plus, Isabel has always been a letter writer from way back ...beginning with years of correspondence with her own mother.

Another autobiography ...( maybe my favorite), is "The Sums of Our Days". This book was the biggest treat after having read most of her fiction books - old & new...
because we 'really' get to know Isabel like 'no' other book she has written!

I love this lady ...( a little shorter than me - a little older than me)...3 times I've gone to hear her speak. Always a packed filled room -- bursting at the seams. She's a 'true' international 'novelist-star'. Much to be admired about this woman's humanity.

In "The Japanese Lover"... You'll find: ( for your a minimum daily reading requirement enjoyment) .....
Rich characters....a reflective historical journey....with luscious language. What's not to like?
Profile Image for Ann.
522 reviews25 followers
November 21, 2015
Interesting story idea, but too many disjointed and melodramatic plot lines, too much telling vs. showing, and totally lacking in the lyrical prose of some of her earlier books. This one felt formulaic and thrown together.
Profile Image for Dalia Nourelden.
678 reviews1,085 followers
February 19, 2025
亘噩丿 丕賱賯乇丕亍丞 賱丕賷夭丕亘賷賱 丕賱賱賷賳丿賶 亘丕賱賳爻亘丕賱賶 賲鬲毓丞馃ぉ
亘丨亘 丕爻賱賵亘賴丕 賵胤乇賷賯鬲賴丕 賵 亘鬲丿禺賱賶 賲毓賱賵賲丕鬲 賵鬲毓乇賮賳賷 丨丕噩丕鬲 亘胤乇賷賯丞 睾賷乇 賲亘丕卮乇丞 賵賮賶 賳賮爻 丕賱賵賯鬲 亘丕賱卮賰賱 丕賱賱賶 賷賴賲賳賶 丕毓乇賮賴 賵賴賵 鬲兀孬賷乇 丕賱丕丨丿丕孬 毓賱賶 丕賱亘卮乇 . 賮賶 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 丿賶 賰丕賳鬲 丕賯賱賴賲 賮賷 丕賱噩丕賳亘 丿賴 亘爻 賱丕夭丕賱鬲 亘鬲毓乇賮賳賷 亘丨丕噩丕鬲 . 賴賳丕 賲孬賱丕 丕囟胤賴丕丿 丕賱賷賴賵丿 賲毓 賴鬲賱乇 貙 賵 丕賱賱賶 丕鬲毓乇囟 賱賷賴 丕賱賷丕亘丕賳賷賳 賮賶 丕賲乇賷賰丕 賵賯鬲 丕賱丨乇亘 丕賱毓丕賱賲賷丞 丕賱孬丕賳賷丞 .賵 丕賱毓賳氐乇賷丞 囟丿 丕賱賷丕亘丕賳賷賷賳 亘毓丿 丕賱丨乇亘 .

丿賴 睾賷乇 丕賱丕賲賵乇 丕賱賱賶 亘鬲丿禺賱賴丕 賵亘鬲鬲毓乇囟 賱賷賴丕 卮禺氐賷丕鬲賴丕 . 賵賴賳丕 賰賲丕賳 賯氐氐 丕賱丨亘 賮賶 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 賲卮 亘爻 賯氐丞 兀賱賲丕 賵丕賷卮賷賲賶 . 丕賱毓丕卮賯 賮賷 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 賲卮 亘爻 丕賱毓丕卮賯 丕賱賷丕亘丕賳賷 賮賶 毓卮丕賯 賰鬲賷乇 貙 賵賯氐氐 丨亘 賲禺鬲賱賮丞 賵毓賱丕賯丕鬲 睾賷乇 鬲賯賱賷丿賷丞 貙 賵氐丿丕賯丕鬲 噩賲賷賱丞 .



丕賷乇賷賳丕 賵爻賷孬 賰丕賳賵丕 賷爻毓賵賳 賱賲毓乇賮丞 爻乇 兀賱賲丕 賵賲賳 賷乇爻賱 賱賴丕 鬲賱賰 丕賱乇爻丕卅賱 賵夭賴賵乇 丕賱睾丕乇丿賷賳賷丕 責責 賵兀賷賳 鬲禺鬲賮賷 兀賱賲丕 責
賱賳鬲毓乇賮 毓賱賶 賯氐丞 丨亘 兀賱賲丕 賵 廿賷卮賷賲賷 丕賱丨亘 丕賱匕賷 亘丿兀 賮賶 睾乇爻 噩匕賵乇賴 亘丿丕禺賱賴賲 賲賳匕 丕賱胤賮賵賱丞 貙 丕賱丨亘 丕賱賲乇賮賵囟 賲賳 丕賱賲噩鬲賲毓 賵丕賱毓丕卅賱丞 貙 丕賱丨亘 丕賱匕賶 賱賳 賷鬲賯亘賱 丕丨丿 賵噩賵丿賴 . 丕賱丨亘 丕賱匕賷 賷丨鬲丕噩 賱丨乇亘 賵賯賵丞 賱賷爻鬲賲乇 賵賱賷馗賴乇 賱賱毓賱賳 禺氐賵氐丕 賮賷 匕賱賰 丕賱鬲賵賯賷鬲 貙 賯賵丞 賯賱賷賱賵賳 賲賳 賷賲鬲賱賰賵賳賴丕 .
毓賱丕賯丞 賲賳 賴匕丕 丕賱胤乇丕夭 賰丕賳鬲 賲爻鬲丨賷賱丞 貙 賰賳鬲 爻鬲噩乇賷賳 兀匕賷丕賱 丕賱賳丿賲 貙
賲賳 丕賱賲丐賰丿 丕賳 丕賱兀丨賰丕賲 丕賱噩丕賴夭丞 賰丕賳鬲 爻鬲胤賵賱賰賲丕 賱鬲丿賲乇賰賲丕 賵鬲賯鬲賱 賴匕丕 丕賱丨亘 .




賱賵 丕賳賳賷 爻兀賲賵鬲 賮賷 睾囟賵賳 丕賱丕賷丕賲 丕賱孬賱丕孬丞 丕賱賲賯亘賱丞 . 賲丕毓爻丕賷 兀賮毓賱 賴匕賴 丕賱兀賷丕賲責 賱丕 卮卅 . 爻兀賮乇睾 乇賵丨賷 賲賳 賰賱 卮卅 貙 賲丕毓丿丕 丕賱丨亘


賵 賱賷爻鬲 丕賱賲丕 賮賯胤 賴賶 丕賱亘胤賱丞 賵賱賷爻鬲 賯氐丞 丕賱丨亘 丕賱賵丨賷丿丞 賮賴賳丕賰 丕賷乇賷賳丕 賵 賳亘丿兀 亘毓賱丕賯鬲賴丕 賲毓 兀賱賲丕
丕賳睾賲爻鬲 廿賷乇賷賳丕 賮賷 丨賷丕丞 兀賱賲丕 貙 賵賰兀賳賴賲丕 卮禺氐賷鬲丕賳 賮賷 乇賵丕賷丞 賮賷賰鬲賵乇賷丞 : 爻賷丿丞 兀乇爻鬲賯乇丕胤賷丞 賵賵氐賷賮鬲賴丕 鬲賯丕賵賲丕賳 丕賱賲賱賱 丕賱丨丕丿 亘丕丨鬲爻丕亍 丕賱卮丕賷 賮賷 賲賳夭賱 賮賷 丕賱亘丕丿賷丞

孬賲 丕賱鬲爻丕丐賱 賵乇丕亍 賯氐丞 丨賷丕鬲賴丕 賵 賴賱 爻鬲賯亘賱 丨亘 爻賷孬 丕賲 鬲乇賮囟賴 責
賴匕賴 丕賱賮鬲丕丞 丕賱鬲賶 丕噩鬲孬鬲 賲賳 賯氐丞 賳乇賵賷噩賷丞貙 賮丕賳亘毓孬鬲 賮賷 賲賰丕賳 睾賷乇 賲鬲賵賯毓 : 賮賷 丿丕乇 賱賱賲爻賳賷賳

鈥徹з呚� 賳丕鬲丕賳賷賱 賮賰丕賳 丨丕賱丞 禺丕氐丞 賮賷 氐丿丕賯鬲賴 賵丨亘賴 貙 賰丕賳 丕賱賮鬲賷 丕賱匕賶 鈥�兀賱賲丕 丕賲爻賰鬲 亘鬲賱丕亘賷亘賴 賲賳匕 丕賱賵賴賱丞 丕賱丕賵賱賶 貙 賮毓夭賲鬲 毓賱賶 丕賳 鬲噩毓賱 賲賳 丕亘賳 丕賱禺丕賱丞 丕賱禺噩賵賱 賴匕丕 禺賷乇 禺賱賮 賱兀禺賷賴丕 丕賱毓夭賷夭 氐丕賲賵賷賱 賱鬲賰賵賳 亘匕賱賰 亘丿丕賷丞 毓賱丕賯丞 賲賲賷夭丞 .
鈥�
鈥徺堌жㄙ娰� 廿爻丨丕賯 賵夭賵噩鬲賴 賱賷賱賷丕賳 賵丨亘賴賲丕 馃槉 丨丕噩丞 賰丿賴 乇賵賲丕賳爻賷丞 噩賲賷賱丞 亘乇睾賲 丕賳 丕賷夭丕亘賷賱 賲乇賰夭鬲卮 賰鬲賷乇 賲毓丕賴賲 亘爻 賱賲丕 賰丕賳鬲 亘鬲匕賰乇 卮賰賱 丕賱毓賱丕賯丞 亘賷賳賴賲 賵賲卮丕毓乇賴賲 丨鬲賶 賵賮丕鬲賴賲 賰丕賳鬲 噩賲賷賷賱丞 馃挀 賴賵 丿賴 丕賱丨亘 丕賱賱賶 賷爻鬲賲乇 賱賳賴丕賷丞 丕賱毓賲乇 .


賰丕賳 丕爻丨丕賯 丨賯丕 乇噩賱丕 賮乇賷丿丕 賲賳 賳賵毓賴 賲賳匕 囟賲賴 兀賱賲丕 賱毓丕卅賱鬲賴 貙 賵丨亘賴 賱毓丕卅賱鬲賴 賵賲毓丕賲賱丕鬲賴 賲毓 賲禺鬲賱賮 丕賱亘卮乇
鈥�賰丕賳 乇噩賱丕 胤賷亘丕 貙 賵賲爻丕賱賲丕 貙 賵賲爻鬲毓丿丕 丿丕卅賲丕 賱賱毓胤丕亍 .
鈥徹з勜� 賮賷 毓丕卅賱丞 亘賷賱丕爻賰賵 賰丕賳 丨丕賱丞 禺丕氐丞 馃槏馃挀


鈥�丕賳 丨亘賳丕 賴賵 賯丿乇賳丕 . 賱賯丿 鬲丨丕亘亘賳丕 賮賷 丨賷丕丞 禺賱鬲 貙 賵爻賳鬲丨丕亘 賮賷 丨賷丕丞 賲爻鬲賯亘賱賷丞 貙 丕賵 乇亘賲丕 賱丕賵噩賵丿 賱賱賲丕囟賶 賵丕賱賲爻鬲賯亘賱 貙 賵賰賱 卮卅 賷丨丿孬 賮賷 丕賱丌賳 賳賮爻賴 貙 賮賷 兀亘毓丕丿 賴匕丕 丕賱賰賵賳 丕賱賱丕賲鬲賳丕賴賷丞 ! 賮賷 賴匕賴 丕賱丨丕賱丞 貙 賳丨賳 丿丕卅賲丕 賲毓丕 貙 賵廿賱賶 丕賱兀亘丿

賮賶 賳賯胤丞 賱賮鬲鬲 賳馗乇賶 亘毓丿 賯乇丕卅鬲賷 賲丕 亘毓丿 丕賱卮鬲丕亍 賵丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 丿賶 丕賷夭丕亘賷賱 亘鬲丨亘 賯氐氐 丨亘 丕賱賳丕爻 丕賱賰亘丕乇 賵丕賱卮禺氐賷丕鬲 賲丕 亘毓丿 丕賱爻鬲賷賳 賵丕賱爻亘毓賷賳 賵賷毓賷卮賵賳 丨丕賱丕鬲 丨亘 賵 乇賵賲丕賳爻賷丞 貙 賵 卮禺氐賷丕鬲賴丕 賮賶 丕賱睾丕賱亘 賮賷賴丕 丨賷賵賷丞 賵卮睾賮 賵賯賵丞 賵亘鬲賰乇賴 丕賱丕爻鬲爻賱丕賲 賱賱爻賳 賵丕賱賲乇囟 .賰丕賳賴丕 鬲卮噩毓 丕賳 丨鬲賶 賲毓 賲乇賵乇 丕賱爻賳 賱丕夭賲 賳丨丕賮馗 毓賱賶 丨賷賵賷鬲賳丕 賵賲賳爻鬲爻賱賲卮 .

賰丕賳鬲 爻鬲鬲賲 毓丕賲賴丕 丕賱孬丕賳賷 賵丕賱孬賲丕賳賷賳貙 賵賯丿 丕囟丨鬲 丕賲乇兀丞 賲爻賳丞 貙 丕賱丕 丕賳賴丕 賰丕賳鬲 鬲乇賮囟 亘賯賵丞 毓亘賵乇 毓鬲亘丞 丕賱賰賴賵賱丞 . 賰丕賳鬲 鬲卮賲卅夭 賲賳 丕賱噩賱賵爻 鬲丨鬲 馗賱 鬲賯丿賲 丕賱毓賲乇 亘毓賷賳賷賳 賳丕卅賲鬲賷賳 貙 賵毓賯賱 賲卮丿賵丿 丕賱賶 丕賱賲丕囟賶 . 賱賯丿 爻亘賯 丕賳 賴賵鬲 毓賱賷 丕賱丕乇囟 賲乇丕鬲 毓丿賷丿丞 貙 賵兀氐賷亘鬲 亘鬲賵乇賲丕鬲 貙 賵丨丕賳 丕賱賵賯鬲 賱鬲鬲賯亘賱 丕賱賲爻丕毓丿丞 貙 賮賰丕賳賵丕 賷賲爻賰賵賳賴丕 賲賳 賲乇賮賯賴丕 賱鬲爻鬲胤賷毓 丕賱賲卮賷 貙 廿賱丕 丕賳賴丕 賱賲 鬲鬲賵賯賮 賷賵賲丕 毓賳 丕賱賲賯丕賵賲丞 賵賰丕賳鬲 鬲丨丕乇亘 亘卮丿丞 賮賰乇丞 丕賱丕爻鬲爻賱丕賲 賱賱賵賴賳 丕賱爻賴賱

賳丨賳 賳卮賷禺 賲賳 爻丕毓丞 丕賱賵賱丕丿丞 賲丕 丕賱丨賷丕丞 丕賱丕 氐賷乇賵乇丞 賲鬲鬲丕賱賷丞 . 賳丨賳 賳賰亘乇 . 丕賱卮卅 丕賱賵丨賷丿 丕賱賲睾丕賷乇 賴賵 兀賳賳丕 兀氐亘丨賳丕 賯丕亘 賯賵爻賷賳 兀賵 兀丿賳賷 賲賳 丕賱賲賵鬲. 賵賲丕 丕賱毓賷亘 賮賷 匕賱賰 責 丕賱丨亘 賵丕賱氐丿丕賯丞 賱丕 賷卮賷禺丕賳

賲賳毓丕 賱賱丕賱鬲亘丕爻 丕賳丕 賲卮 賯氐丿賶 丕賳 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 亘鬲乇賰夭 毓賱賶 賰亘丕乇 丕賱爻賲 賴賶 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 賲卮 亘鬲丿賵乇 丨賵丕賱賷賴賲 賱丕賳 丕賷夭丕亘賷賱 亘鬲乇噩毓 賱賲丕囟賷賴賲 賵胤賮賵賱鬲賴賲 賵卮亘丕亘賴賲 賮亘賳卮賵賮 賰賱 賲乇丕丨賱賴賲 丕賱毓賲乇賷丞 賵賮賶 卮亘丕亘 賮賶 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 丕賷乇賷賳丕 賵爻賷孬 .

毓夭賷夭鬲賷 丕賷夭丕亘賷賱 賱賯丿 丕氐亘丨鬲賷 亘賱丕卮賰 賵丕丨丿丞 賲賳 丕賱乇賵丕卅賷賷賳 丕賱匕賷賳 爻毓丿鬲 亘丕賱鬲毓乇賮 毓賱賷賴賲 賵丕賳賵賶 賯乇丕亍丞 亘丕賯賶 丕毓賲丕賱賰 賱賷爻 亘爻亘亘 賴匕賴 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 亘卮賰賱 禺丕氐 賱賰賳 賱丕賳賰 賱賲 鬲禺匕賱賷賳賶 丨鬲賶 丕賱丕賳 賰賱賲丕 賱噩兀鬲 賱賰賶 馃ぉ馃槏

賮賶 丕賱賳賴丕賷丞 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 賱胤賷賮丞 賵禺賮賷賮丞 賵爻賱爻丞 . 丕賳丕 丕丨亘 丕爻賱賵亘 丕賷夭丕亘賷賱 賵丕丨亘 賰鬲丕亘丕鬲賴丕 賵廿賱賶 賱賯丕亍 丌禺乇 丕賷夭丕賷賷賱 馃挀馃挀

佗佴/ 佟贍 / 佗贍佗贍
Profile Image for Carlos.
134 reviews114 followers
September 30, 2024
Al principio del libro, pens茅 que la protagonista era Irina, pero me equivoqu茅, ya que era Alma. Un libro mezclado entre novela hist贸rica y sentimental. El odio de Estados Unidos hacia Jap贸n en contexto de guerra, lo que familias totalmente inocentes tienen que vivir por algo tan absurdo como la guerra. Sentimental por otro lado, por algo como es llegar a la vejez.
Se habla mucho de la cultura japonesa, sus modales, su diario vivir, la diferencia que tienen con nosotros los occidentales; las tradiciones, el poder de la familia. Lo que Takao tuvo que vivir fue sencillamente insoportable, nadie aguantar铆a semejante vida.
Alma, una persona ya en la 煤ltima etapa de su vida bastante c贸moda econ贸micamente hablando. Siempre tuvo todo lo material, pudo hacer y deshacer, con una excepci贸n: Ichimei. Cargando una pesada mochila de moralidad y cosas que no hizo por culpa del qu茅 dir谩n.... Vida llena de arrepentimientos y dedicada m谩s al pasado que al presente. Quiz谩s una vez llegando a esa etapa de la vida es normal vivir del pasado, no lo s茅.
Por otro lado, Irina tambi茅n tiene su historia, una horrible infancia, donde pasan esas cosas que no puedes olvidar y te penan de por vida, donde necesitas ayuda para salir adelante, ya que hacerlo sola es sencillamente imposible. El nieto de Alma, Seth, la ayud贸 con eso. Lleg贸 como soporte para componer a una Irina casi acabada emocionalmente.
La historia se enred贸 un poco durante el libro, saltaban al presente y al pasado quiz谩s demasiado r谩pidamente. A veces costaba seguirle el hilo, pero nada para reclamar con fuerza.
Debo rescatar que los 煤ltimos 2 cap铆tulos fueron geniales. Allende supo c贸mo escribir el final, genial. Cr茅dito tambi茅n a Nathaniel, quien tom贸 un protagonismo inesperado, seg煤n yo.
Profile Image for Karen.
688 reviews1,748 followers
November 24, 2015
I really liked this book. It's about friendship, love, and aging with many touching relationships.

(I also learned about how the Japenese Americans were sent away to interment camps after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, I had never known this happened).
Profile Image for Esil.
1,118 reviews1,473 followers
October 24, 2015
When I started reading Isabel Allende's The Japanese Lover, I liked it well enough but I wasn't feeling anything special. I think I was suffering a bit from the high expectations that come with reading a book by Allende. But as I got deeper into it, I found myself really drawn in by the story and characters. It doesn't have the intense richness of The House of Spirits or some of Allende's other books set in Latin America, but Allende's particular ability to weave characters and their stories and history together is very recognizable. The Japanese Lover deals with the parallel stories of Irina and Alma. Irina is in her 20s, and works in a retirement home in San Francisco. She grew up in Moravia with her grandparents until age 12 after which she was sent to live in Texas with her mother and stepfather, and as the story develops you realize that she has a difficult complicated past. Alma is in her 80s and a resident in the retirement home, and was sent by her parents to San Francisco from Poland just before WWII, and she too has a complicated past. The book is about the stories of these two women and their friendship. For Alma, this is a story about coming to terms with her past at the end of her life, and for Irina it is about overcoming her past so she can move one. The story moves back and forth in time, and true to Allende's engagement with politics and history, she effectively uses a few significant historical events around the globe as a backdrop. Alma and Irina's stories are complex, and at times verge on being disjointed and scattered, but this is a minor criticism. What I really liked most about the book is that Alma and Irina are great characters. They are strong, flawed, scarred, recognizable, kind and ultimately defy stereotypes. If you have read and loved earlier books by Allende, don't read this one looking for the richness of those books because you might be disappointed. But if you read The Japanese Lover on its own terms, taking the story as it comes, hopefully you have the same experience I did of being drawn in by Irina and Alma and their stories. Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for an opportunity to read an advance copy.
Profile Image for Canadian Jen.
606 reviews2,242 followers
March 7, 2016
Anyone who has read Allende recognizes her talent for narratives that transcend time, love and cultures across generations.

In this novel, there are two stories entwined: one of eternal love told by Alma, an 80 year old woman as she reflects back on her life to her assistant Irina, from the walls of her retirement room; and Irina's own difficult, sad life journey. Themes of friendship, loss, family, love and forgiveness abound.

I've read some harsh reviews and perhaps I didn't feel the same emotional connection as I would have preferred - this is only my 2nd following House of Spirits which I loved - I still felt she skillfully spun a captivating and memorable read. For that, I remain an adoring Allende fan and bestow a 4鈽� rating.
Profile Image for Candi.
692 reviews5,343 followers
January 20, 2016
3 stars

"We are all born happy. Life gets us dirty along the way, but we can clean it up. Happiness is not exuberant or noisy, like pleasure or joy; it's silent, tranquil, and gentle; it's a feeling of satisfaction inside that begins with self-love."

Alma Belasco knows that happiness is not an easy achievement. After years of learning and growing and forgiving herself for choices she has made, the aging Alma knows a thing or two about living life and feeling fulfilled. Separated from her parents during the Nazi occupation of Poland, Alma was raised by a caring and prosperous aunt and uncle in San Francisco. Here she makes a lifelong connection with two men 鈥� her devoted cousin, Nathaniel, and Ichimei, the love of her life. However, war, the internment of the Japanese-Americans after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, and economic and cultural differences are all seemingly insurmountable barriers to Alma and Ichimei's relationship throughout their lives.

Caretaker Irina Bazili has faced adversity and heartache of her own. Alma, now a resident at Lark House where this young, Moldavian immigrant is employed, is perhaps the one person who can teach the haunted Irina how to find peace with herself and seek happiness. Alma shares the wisdom that comes with age and experience and establishes a trust and a bond of friendship that Irina clearly needs at this time.

Isabel Allende has long been one of my favorite authors. So, needless to say, I was quite excited to read this book. While I can certainly say that I enjoyed The Japanese Lover, I also have to admit it is not one of my favorite Allende novels. I wanted to get a bit closer to these characters of many layers. While I caught a glimpse of their dimensions, I still felt a bit estranged. Perhaps it was the jumping between timelines as well as characters that seemed to impose a barrier in my mind. Maybe it was the dialogue itself that left me feeling a little let down. I can't quite pinpoint what was lacking for me personally. I would have loved to get a better perspective of Ichimei himself. "They called him Ichimei, meaning 'life', 'light', 'brilliance', or 'star'鈥�" He truly was the light in Alma's life and I wanted to get a more intimate look at this admirable and genuine man.

There is a wealth of themes running through this novel that certainly speak to Allende's ability to present her readers with food for thought. This would be a great book for a club - I think it would definitely generate much discussion on a wide range of topics. On my end, I will make sure I catch any of her earlier novels that I may have missed along the way.
Profile Image for Kimberly .
665 reviews128 followers
July 7, 2022
Beautiful

This is my second visit with this author, Isabel Allende. Her writing is wonderful and her characters come to life. Nevertheless, this story was not as intriguing as the other work I've read. Its the story of a young, damaged woman finding her place among the residents of an assisted living facility. The overarching message is of love and compassion. Well done!
Profile Image for Karen.
2,470 reviews931 followers
May 19, 2024
At its core, Isabel Allende鈥檚 The Japanese Lover is a love story that spans decades. But, it is about so much more.

It's about surviving, about aging, about forbidden love, about the depth of caring and friendship that allows loved ones to seek their own happiness.

Even if some other reviewers were critical of her story telling, I felt the author skillfully spun a captivating and memorable read.
Profile Image for Phrynne.
3,859 reviews2,600 followers
June 29, 2018
Contrary to just about everybody else, I enjoyed this book more than I did . I was fascinated by the information about the Japanese internment camps and was equally intrigued by life, as this author sees it anyway, in a retirement home.

The story bounced around in time, backwards and forwards, but Allende is a skilful writer and I was always able to keep up. She also uses a deceitful little trick at the end, aided and abetted by her main character, which confuses everyone about the ending of the love affair. Speaking of love affairs, this book is not a romance. The romance does occur, in fact it is ticking over the whole time, but it is always quiet and in the background just like Ichimei, the Japanese lover, himself.

I enjoyed the Belasco family dynasty especially Nathaniel and Seth but felt a little short changed on Irina who had plenty of prominence in the story, plus an appalling back story, and yet I still felt I did not know her at all. Actually although Allende writes absolutely beautiful prose she is always detached from her characters and they suffer a little from that.

But I do not intend to criticise. It is a beautifully written book, frequently very moving and covering almost all of one very interesting person's life time. I enjoyed it very much'
Profile Image for Fatma Al Zahraa Yehia.
569 reviews887 followers
October 30, 2024
亘丿兀鬲賴丕 賲賳亘賴乇丞 賰毓丕丿鬲賷 賲毓 賰鬲丕亘丕鬲 兀賱賱賷賳丿賷貙 賵賱賰賳 賵氐賱鬲 廿賱賶 孬賱孬 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 賲賯乇乇丞 毓丿賲 丕爻鬲賰賲丕賱賴丕.
賵噩丿鬲 賵賯鬲賴丕 兀賳 兀賱賱賷賳丿賷 賵賯毓 賲賳賴丕 丕賷賯丕毓賴丕 丕賱爻丕丨乇 丕賱賲丨賰賲 賮賷 賴匕丕 丕賱噩夭亍. 賮賯丿鬲 丕賱丨賰丕賷丞 丨賲賷賲賷鬲賴丕. 賰丕賳 丕賱爻乇丿 鬲賯乇賷乇賷丕 亘賱丕 毓丕胤賮丞貙 賵賮賯丿鬲 丕賴鬲賲丕賲賷 亘丕賱兀丨丿丕孬 丕賱丿乇丕賲賷丞 丕賱賲丐爻賮丞 丕賱鬲賷 鬲丨丿孬 賱賱卮禺氐賷丕鬲.

賱兀賵賱 賲乇丞 丕毓乇賮 毓賳 賲毓爻賰乇丕鬲 丕賱毓夭賱 丕賱鬲賷 兀賯丕賲鬲賴丕 丕賱賵賱丕賷丕鬲 丕賱賲鬲丨丿丞 賱賱噩丕賱賷丞 丕賱賷丕亘丕賳賷丞 賵賯鬲 丕賱丨乇亘 丕賱毓丕賱賲賷丞 丕賱孬丕賳賷丞. 賵賱賰賳 兀賱賱賷賳丿賷 乇賵鬲賴 亘卮賰賱 賱賲 賷爻鬲丿乇 丿丕禺賱賷 兀賷 鬲毓丕胤賮-賵賷丕賱賱睾乇丕亘丞-賲毓 賲丕 賷丨丿孬 賱賴賲.
兀卮毓乇 兀賳 賴匕丕 丕賱噩夭亍 賱賲 賷兀禺丿 丨馗賴 噩賷丿丕 賮賷 丕賱賰鬲丕亘丞貙 賮禺乇噩 亘丕乇丿丕 賵亘賱丕 乇賵丨 毓賱賶 丕賱乇睾賲 賲賳 夭禺賲賴 丕賱丿乇丕賲賷.

賱賰賳 亘毓丿 丕賱賳氐賮 丕賱孬丕賳賷貙 毓丕丿鬲 廿賱賶 丕賷夭丕亘賷賱 丕賱丨丕賰賷丞 丕賱禺丕乇賯丞 丕賱鬲賷 兀毓乇賮賴丕. 兀賲爻賰鬲 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 賵賰賳鬲 兀鬲乇賰賴丕 賲賳 賷丿賷 亘氐毓賵亘丞.
賯氐氐 丨亘 亘兀卮賰丕賱 賲禺鬲賱賮丞 賵睾賷乇 鬲賯賱賷丿賷丞. 賰丕賳 丕賱廿禺賱丕氐 賴賵 丕賱賯丕爻賲 丕賱賲卮鬲乇賰 亘賷賳賴賲. 兀賵 "丕賱鬲賯亘賱" 丕賱匕賷 賷兀鬲賷 廿賱賷賳丕 賮賷 賲乇丨賱丞 賲鬲兀禺乇丞 賲賳 丕賱毓賲乇 亘兀賳賳丕 賱丕 賳賲賱賰 丕賱胤乇賮 丕賱兀禺乇 亘卮賰賱 賰丕賲賱. 賵兀賳 賱賴匕丕 丕賱胤乇賮 丕賱兀禺乇 賯氐丞 兀禺乇賶 賱丕 賳毓賱賲賴丕. 賵廿賳 毓乇賮賳丕賴丕貙 賮賷噩亘 兀賳 賳丐賲賳 亘兀賳 鬲賱賰 丕賱賯氐丞 賴賶 噩夭亍 兀氐賷賱 賲賳 賴匕丕 丕賱卮禺氐 丕賱匕賷 兀丨亘亘賳丕賴.

兀亘胤丕賱 賯氐氐 丕賱丨亘 賴賳丕 賰賱 賲賳賴賲 賱賲 賷爻鬲胤毓 兀賳 賷賲鬲賱賰 丨亘賷亘賴 亘卮賰賱 賰丕賲賱貙 賰丕賳 賴賳丕賰 賲賳 賷卮丕乇賰賴 賮賷賴 亘卮賰賱 兀賵 亘兀禺乇. 賵丕賱賲賮丕噩卅 兀賳 鬲賱賰 賵噩賵丿 "丕賱卮乇賷賰" 賰丕賳 亘賲孬丕亘丞 丿毓賲 賱賱毓賱丕賯丞 賵賱賷爻 賴丕丿賲丕 賱賴丕.
亘丕賱鬲兀賰賷丿 賳賵毓 賲賳 丕賱毓賱丕賯丕鬲 賱賷爻 賲賳 丕賱爻賴賵賱丞 鬲賯亘賱賴 兀賵 丨鬲賶 廿賳噩丕丨賴.

鬲賳丕賵賱鬲 兀賱賱賷賳丿賷 賴賳丕 兀賷囟丕 "丕賱毓噩夭" 兀賵 丕賱卮賷禺賵禺丞 賵丕賱鬲賯丿賲 賮賷 丕賱毓賲乇 亘卮賰賱 賰丕卮賮 賵廿賳 賰丕賳鬲 賲賰丕卮賮丞 乇賯賷賯丞. 賳噩丿 氐乇丕毓 賲賳 賷氐賱 廿賱賶 丕賱賳賴丕賷丞. 賴賱 賷噩亘 兀賳 賳丨丕乇亘 廿賱賶 丕賱賳賮爻 丕賱兀禺賷乇貙 兀賲 賳乇賮毓 乇丕賷丞 丕賱丕爻鬲爻賱丕賲 賵賳乇丨賱 亘賰乇丕賲丞責

賰賳鬲 丕鬲賲賳賶 兀賳 丕毓胤賷 賴匕賴 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 禺賲爻 賳噩賵賲貙 賵賱賰賳 噩賮丕賮 丕賱噩夭亍 丕賱兀賵賱 賴賵 賲丕 賳賯氐 鬲賯賷賷賲賷 賱賴丕
Profile Image for Diane S 鈽�.
4,901 reviews14.5k followers
November 14, 2015
3.5 After overcoming my initial reaction that this novel would not have the depth which Allende was noted for in her earlier novels (and it did not)I realized that this was a very good story. It touched on some very important historical events: the Nazis, the attack on Pearl harbor and its resulting Japanese interment camps, cultural differences and expectations, aids and homosexuality as well as child pornography and sexual abuse. I did, however, have a problem with Ada throughout much of this novel, liked her much better as an elderly lady than her portrayal in her backstory. My favorites were Daniel and Irina. Would have liked Irina to have a larger part.

Yet it did have its problems for me. I had trouble connecting to the characters. Did not feel the emotional pull behind the words. I read them but did not feel them. Still this is good commercial fiction, the story is interesting and flows well. Yet I miss the Allende of old.
Profile Image for *TANYA*.
1,002 reviews408 followers
February 22, 2017
Very good book. A story told throughout several decades. And some stories told were "gasp" worthy.
Profile Image for Sandysbookaday .
2,473 reviews2,392 followers
November 16, 2018
EXCERPT: In Lark House, where there was a depressing majority of women, Jacques Devine was considered the star attraction,the only heart-throb among the twenty-eight male residents. He was known as Frenchie, not because he had been born in France, but because of his exquisite manners - he held the doors open for the ladies, pulled their chairsback for them, and never went around with his fly unzipped - and because he could dance, despite his fossilized spine. At the age of ninety he walked with a straight back thanks to the rods and screws that had been surgically attached to it. He still sported some of his curly head of hair and knew how to play cards, at which he cheated shamelessly. He was sound in body, apart from the usual arthritis, high blood pressure, and deafness, inevitable in the winter of life, and quite lucid, although not sufficiently to recall whether he had had lunch or not. That was why he was on the second level, where he received all the help he needed. He had arrived in Lark House with his third wife, but she had only survived for a few weeks before being run over in the street by an absent minded cyclist.

ABOUT THIS BOOK: In 1939, as Poland falls under the shadow of the Nazis, young Alma Belasco's parents send her away to live in safety with an aunt and uncle in their opulent mansion in San Francisco. There, as the rest of the world goes to war, she encounters Ichimei Fukuda, the quiet and gentle son of the family's Japanese gardener. Unnoticed by those around them, a tender love affair begins to blossom. Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the two are cruelly pulled apart as Ichimei and his family, like thousands of other Japanese Americans are declared enemies and forcibly relocated to internment camps run by the United States government. Throughout their lifetimes, Alma and Ichimei reunite again and again, but theirs is a love that they are forever forced to hide from the world.

Decades later, Alma is nearing the end of her long and eventful life. Irina Bazili, a care worker struggling to come to terms with her own troubled past, meets the elderly woman and her grandson, Seth, at San Francisco's charmingly eccentric Lark House nursing home. As Irina and Seth forge a friendship, they become intrigued by a series of mysterious gifts and letters sent to Alma, eventually learning about Ichimei and this extraordinary secret passion that has endured for nearly seventy years.

MY THOUGHTS: Allende is an author I have come to late in life, and one whom I have come to love.

She writes sweepingly majestic tales full of human frailty, and passion, and deceit and love. Her characters are so very human; they are people we know and love. By the end of this book, they felt like family and friends to me.

The Japanese Lover swings from present day to Alma's, Irina's and Ichimai's pasts and back again, but does so seamlessly and to great effect. Allende's writing is, as always, beautiful, evocative and haunting.

Although I listened to it on audio (and the narrator Joanna Gleeson was superb), this is a book I will be buying to keep, one I will return to time and again.

THE AUTHOR: Isabel Allende Llona is a Chilean-American novelist. Allende, who writes in the "magic realism" tradition, is considered one of the first successful women novelists in Latin America. She has written novels based in part on her own experiences, often focusing on the experiences of women, weaving myth and realism together. She has lectured and done extensive book tours and has taught literature at several US colleges. She currently resides in California with her husband. Allende adopted U.S. citizenship in 2003.

DISCLOSURE: I listened to the audiobook of The Japanese Lover by Isabel Allende, narrated by Joanna Gleeson, published by Simon and Schuster Audio via OverDrive. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

Please refer to my 欧宝娱乐.com profile page or the about page on sandysbookaday.wordpress.com for an explanation of my rating system. This review and others are also published on my blog sandysbookaday.wordpress.com
Profile Image for aPriL does feral sometimes .
2,109 reviews497 followers
July 9, 2016
Omg, 'The Japanese Lover' is such an emotionally flat read! The title is the only grouping of words with a hint of a living heartbeat for what seemed to me like thousands of pages. However, unlike 'Ripper', which Isabel Allende also wrote, this book is coherent.

Reader, if gelded literary reads are the kind of books which you recommend to your book club because it helped you pass the hours between arranging the flowers into a delicate expression of beauty and checking the work of the servants, or you wish you had a quiet, but socially-responsible, elevated life of wealth and 'the mind', may I then recommend this book. The novel IS certainly written well enough for a particular upper-crust soulful audience I've noticed exists, especially patron-of-the-Art wannabes whether actually wealthy or not (fans of Paula McLain will adore this book).

This book is kind of a gentrified Romance novel for an excruciatingly sensitive, necessarily protected audience of liberal rich upper-class blue bloods who must live life speaking in quieted soft whispers because the few emotions they allow to flow around them must be wrapped in thick cotton to mute the intensities of ugly life. Too much? Sorry. I apologize. Don't want to offend...so if I am, stop reading this review.

The tone of the novel is close to the same feeling I have drinking a soda which was opened and left out for a week, which is surprising because the subjects are death, dying, racism, child abuse, war atrocities and aging - which come up off-screen in the memories and present time of many forgettable characters involved with an assisted-living senior facility in California. Old Alma Belasco, a pampered wealthy artist, her married secret lover Ichimei Fukuda, likewise very old but also a member of a social class forbidden to her - a son of a gardener, and Irina Bazili, a young refugee and an elderly-care worker, are the primary personalities we follow throughout the story. Their introduced but quickly marginalized friends, families, and fellow patients are mentioned for some reason and the brief flattened description of their lives apparently outline the secret sufferings people undergo all around us. Aah, the quiet desperation and hidden heroism!

These people should have been engaging and long-lived in our minds long after we, gentle reader, have put this kind light-stepping book down on our highly polished coffee tables, and probably they will be for some readers. Perhaps one day I too will like books which discuss searing issues in a manner that does not tread too hard on our hearts.
Profile Image for Michael.
1,094 reviews1,927 followers
December 7, 2015
From reading the book blurb, I was wary that this novel would be emotionally overwrought. :
Sweeping through time and spanning generations and continents, The Japanese Lover explores questions of identity, abandonment, redemption, and the unknowable impact of fate on our lives..

I found it to be one of those big-hearted tales that pluck your heartstrings while you root for the main characters to find the love of others that they deserve. It wasn鈥檛 quite sappy, but came close. We watch a friendship develop between an elderly Jewish society woman, Alma Blasco, and her young assistant, Irina Bazili, and in the process they begin to overcome emotionally debilitating barriers arising from their secrets. Alma we soon learn has had a periodic Japanese lover in her long life, a gardener鈥檚 son whom she didn鈥檛 have the courage to love openly in defiance of the barriers of class and racism. Irina is beloved by many, including Alma鈥檚 grandson, but for some reason cannot seem to trust herself to love. From the first introduction of these characters I needed to know the wellsprings of their character and how that plays into their chances to break out of their patterns.

I was captivated by the mystery behind the characters. We start with Irina鈥檚 perspective as she comes to love her new job as a sort of social director for residents at an upscale assisted living complex in San Francisco. She is amused by the shenanigans and humor of these aging hippies and quirky ex-professionals residing at Lark House. This community is close to idyllic compared to the institutions most aged in America are subject to, but there are unfortunate levels of care set by disability. Irina is inspired by their passions and courage and thrives on their emotional honesty. In turn she becomes popular among them for the same qualities. But at a certain point we become aware how she has trouble with deeper levels of trust.

Taking outside work with Alma in the independent living part of Lark House puts her in the middle of two streams that erode her barriers. Like her, Alma doesn鈥檛 let her hair down very far. But the immediate affinity between them leads to a process of self-revelation in stages that I found satisfying to experience. Alma is about 80 but still pretty fit, making it a mystery why she largely retires to a senior living community from an active career in fashion art and managing the family charitable foundation. Alma鈥檚 lawyer grandson Seth provides some yeast for Alma and Irina鈥檚 friendship by engaging them both in his project to write Alma鈥檚 biography. Irina begins to collude with Seth in uncovering Alma鈥檚 mysteries. They soon suspect the hidden relationship with Ichimei Fukuda, but don鈥檛 understand its importance in her life. Meanwhile, Seth鈥檚 unrequited love for Irina whets him to gently assail her secrets.

As an initial doorway to their bonding Alma and Irina share a disruption of their childhoods by immigration to live with relatives in the U.S鈥擜lma from Poland before Hitler鈥檚 invasion and Irina from post-Soviet Moldavia. There is some overkill to the range of issues that come out in the novel鈥檚 plot. Beyond death and dying from aging we get historical elements of the Holocaust and the Japanese internment in World War 2 and delving into racism, classism, sexism, homophobia, and child abuse. Because of the focus on a few characters in their present, a lot of this material is subjugated to the background like an envelope that is up to the reader to open and let play in the imagination.

Overall, this is a paean to the persistence of love against long odds, which could easily be a wallow in melodrama, but I didn鈥檛 feel that way. In the end I liked it the same way I did for Ford鈥檚 鈥淗otel and the Corner of Bitter and Sweet鈥� and appreciated its stretch in the direction of the stories told by Marquez in 鈥淟ove in the Time of Cholera鈥� and Krauss in 鈥淭he History of Love.鈥�
Profile Image for Karen J.
477 reviews243 followers
December 7, 2021
The Japanese Lover by Isabel Allende
猸愶笍猸愶笍猸愶笍猸愶笍

I really enjoyed this read definitely not your typical love story. The main character Alma Belasco and Ichimei Fukuda take us through their life span right from childhood to their life鈥檚 end. I am still asking myself did Alma make the right choses or were they the wrong choses regarding their happiness in life鈥檚 journey?
Profile Image for Connie  G.
2,036 reviews664 followers
February 12, 2019
Alma Belasco, now an octogenarian living in a retirement residence, is telling the story of her life to her grandson Seth and her immigrant care worker Irina. Alma met Ichimei Fukuda, the son of her family's Japanese gardener, when they were children. Their instant connection eventually turned into a lifelong love affair which is recounted through letters and flashbacks. The Fukuda family was sent to an internment camp for Japanese-Americans during World War II, and lived under terrible conditions in the Utah desert. Ichimei and Alma started corresponding at that time. Alma was a Jew from Poland who had been sent to relatives in the United States as the Nazis invaded her country, so she had also been a victim of prejudice.

The book has a large number of characters and covers many social problems, tragedies, and important events in the 20th Century. There were humorous passages about growing old, and the romance was a sweet story. But it seemed that we got to know a lot of characters in a superficial way. I would have cared more about their outcomes if the book had gone deeper into the emotions of the main characters, and found it took a while to warm up to them. 3.5 stars.
Profile Image for Jenny Qn.
10 reviews
March 17, 2021
This read was very interesting. The plot and the story is different and stunning.
Profile Image for Cathrine 鈽笍 .
777 reviews395 followers
May 4, 2016
3鈽�
鈥淲hy do you ask, Aunt Lillian?鈥�
鈥滲ecause...marriage without passion is like food without salt.鈥�


Such was the issue for me with this one. It was like a well prepared meal without salt. Or perhaps, not the seasoning I prefer. I kept putting my fork down after each bite to sip my wine only to experience a disconnect. I was hoping for a nice dessert at the end that made it worthwhile. Instead I had more wine. A Dianthus Ros茅 from Tablas Creek. That put a smile on my face.

Profile Image for Brenda.
4,846 reviews2,944 followers
November 16, 2015
At a very young age, Alma Mendel鈥檚 family was torn apart 鈥� first her beloved brother Samuel was shipped off overseas then not too much later, her parents informed Alma that she would be journeying from her home in Poland to San Francisco to live with an Aunt and Uncle she had never met. It was 1939 and the Mendels wanted their children to be safe 鈥� they were determined to stay in Poland themselves but have their children returned to them after the war鈥�

Alma鈥檚 journey to her new life took seventeen days 鈥� she was accompanied only by an English governess whom Alma disliked intensely. On her arrival at Sea Cliff, the home of the Belasco family which comprised her Aunt, Uncle and three cousins, she was distraught. Her grief was hard to watch, and she took to hiding in the wardrobe in her bedroom where she cried as if her heart would break. And indeed, to Alma, it was broken.

The gardener for Sea Cliff was a man named Takao Fukuda. His hands were magic; his skills such that the surrounding gardens were healthy and beautiful. Alma took to wandering through the plants, taking some measure of happiness from the smells and colours. It was there she met for the first time Takao鈥檚 son Ichimei. He was following in his father鈥檚 footsteps 鈥� the two children became playmates.

Many years later, an elderly Alma moved into Lark House, a residence for the aged 鈥� Alma was housed independently as she was still a fit and active woman. When Irina Bazili became Alma鈥檚 caretaker an unlikely friendship began. Irina was a young woman, but had an affinity with the elderly. She also held a secret deep inside herself 鈥� she had never told a soul, and it would always remain that way. As Irina came to know Alma, she realized that she too had a secret; had the years been kind to Alma? Would her past be something they could talk about together?

I absolutely loved The Japanese Lover by Isabel Allende. It is a profound and deeply moving account of love, loyalty, and the confusion of race plus the atrocities of war. The internment camps which were dotted around the country 鈥� situated in vast, hot and dry deserts 鈥� the fear of imprisonment, but also the human nature which caused people to come together while in terrible circumstances. The writing is gentle; beautiful 鈥� nothing graphic disturbs the flowing prose. This is my first by this author, and I鈥檓 hugely impressed. Highly recommended.

With thanks to Simon & Schuster for my copy to read and review.
Profile Image for Carolyn.
2,621 reviews719 followers
July 30, 2022
I loved this gentle love story, which transcends many difficulties over several decades, including separation, war and marriage to other partners.

We meet Alma as an octagenerian in an apartment at a home for the elderly. As a young child, with war looming in 1939, she was sent from Poland by her Jewish parents to live with her wealthy Aunt and Uncle in San Francisco. There she met Ichimei, the youngest son of the Japanese gardener and as the two children grew up together so did their gentle love for each other. However, they were torn apart when the gardener and his family were interred for the duration of the war and sent to a horrendous camp in the Utah desert. Although they would meet again later years later and embark on an affair, they both realised marriage was impossible not only because of the difference in their social status but also because of the post war racism against the Japanese. Over time Alma would marry her cousin Nathaniel, become an artist making designing clothing and enjoy a life of privilege while Ichimei would also marry and establish a successful business growing flowers with his family.

Now in her old age, Alma鈥檚 grandson Seth is helping her put her memoirs together, aided by Irina, an assistant at the care home who Alma hires to help her sort her papers. Irina is trying to put her own painful past behind her and is intrigued by Alma鈥檚 life. Threaded through the narrative are Alma鈥檚 memories of the past as well as tender letters to her from Ichimei over the decades.

I enjoyed all the characters, but like many reviewers did feel that they were kept at a distance as we didn鈥檛 fully get to know them. However, in some ways that was in keeping with their characters. Alma was quite a private woman, who enjoyed her independence, while Seth was quiet and gentle and Irina, although bright and bubbly with her elderly clients at the home, was still cautiously finding her way in the world outside. Beautifully written, it is a tender and moving story of love, loss and overcoming adversity.
Profile Image for Heba.
1,214 reviews2,995 followers
Read
July 8, 2021
丕賱賰丕鬲亘丞 "廿賷夭丕亘賷賱" 丨賰丕亍丞 亘丕乇毓丞 鬲禺鬲胤賮賰 亘爻丨乇 賰賱賲丕鬲賴丕 貙 鬲匕毓賳 賱賴丕 丨鬲賶 丕賱賳賴丕賷丞貙 賮丕賱爻乇丿 丕賱乇卮賷賯 賷鬲賳丕睾賲 賮賷 丨亘賰丞 賲丨賰賲丞 賲卮賵賯丞 鬲鬲賳賯賱 毓亘乇 丕賱夭賲賳 賮賷賲丕 亘賷賳 兀賲丕賰賳 毓丿賷丿丞..
賰賲丕 賱賵 賰丕賳鬲 鬲氐胤丨亘賰 賮賷 乇丨賱丞 賱毓賵丕賱賲 鬲囟賲 胤賵丕卅賮 賲禺鬲賱賮丞 賲賳 丕賱亘卮乇 亘兀禺鬲賱丕賮 丕毓賲丕乇賴賲 ..胤亘丕卅毓賴賲 貙毓賯丕卅丿賴賲貙 賵 賳賵丕夭毓賴賲... 賵鬲亘丕賷賳 賲爻丕賱賰賴賲 賮賷 丿乇賵亘 丕賱丨賷丕丞...
賵賱賰賳 賱賲 賷乇賯 賱賷 丕賱丨亘 賴賳丕 ...丕賱匕賷 賷賯鬲丕鬲 毓賱賶 丕賱禺賷丕賳丞 賵丕賱兀賳丕賳賷丞....
賴賳丕 丕賲乇兀丞 賱丕賲亘丕賱賷丞 鬲賳爻丕賯 賵乇丕亍 乇睾亘丕鬲賴丕 貙 賱賲 鬲賰賳 賱鬲鬲賳丕夭賱 毓賳 丨賷丕丞 丕賱鬲乇賮 賵丕賱亘匕禺 丕賱鬲賷 鬲丨賷丕賴丕 賱鬲賳鬲賯賱 賱賱毓賷卮 賲毓 乇噩賱 賷毓賷卮 丨賷丕丞 夭賴賷丿丞 亘爻賷胤丞 ...
賱賲 鬲鬲賲賰賳 乇氐丕賳鬲賴 賵丕鬲夭丕賳賴 賲賳 丕賱鬲睾賱亘 毓賱賶 禺賮鬲賴丕 賵丕賳丿賮丕毓賴丕 ...
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Profile Image for Emilio Berra.
285 reviews254 followers
August 27, 2018
Una storia improbabile
Se la morte che avanza viene raffigurata con la falce, non stupiamoci se gli ultimi palpiti della vecchia protagonista sono rivolti a un giardiniere.

California, in questi ultimi anni.
Una residenza per anziani piuttosto particolare, in cui inspiegabilmente si 猫 ritirata Alma Belasco, ricchissima, di atteggiamento aristocratico e supponente. E' affezionata a poche persone, fra cui l'infermiera Irina. L'intesa fra le due donne sveler脿 i segreti delle loro rispettive vite.
Una storia punteggiata di drammi e tragedie, anche se l'atmosfera che si respira 猫 melodrammatica, per il sentore agrodolce che impregna tante pagine.
Questo libro dal titolo ottocentesco, lezioso fin dalla copertina, mi ha dato l'impressione di un brutto romanzone d'intrattenimento presumibilmente rivolto ad un pubblico femminile affezionato spettatore di telenovele .
La mentalit脿 di fondo che percorre le improbabili vicende narrate 猫 quella di certi salotti televisivi, cio猫 basata sui diffusi stereotipi dell'edonismo-laicismo modaiolo spruzzato di femminismo alla panna montata, che intravede nel consumismo volto a soddisfare vanit脿 e desideri, il convenzionale orizzonte valoriale ed estetico. Tant'猫 che la parte pi霉 autentica del testo, quasi collaterale, riguarda la descrizione di un doloroso momento della Storia americana. Il resto mi 猫 parso soprattutto una crema pasticcera inacidita.
La nostra romanziera fa incetta, con superficialit脿, di tutto ci貌 di cui si parla in questi anni, per cui gli ingredienti vanno dalla droga all'Aids, dall'ossessione erotica senile al mondo gay; toccando temi come l'eutanasia, gli orrori della pedo-pornografia ... in una trama troppo incalzante, con giravolte e colpi di scena poco credibili. Una storia 'costruita a tavolino' in cui l'autenticit脿 猫 latitante.

La scrittura tende alla scorrevolezza, ma sovente 'posa', diventa banale, da romanzetto rosa. Infatti troviamo "confidenze sussurrate tra un abbraccio e l'altro", "baci interminabili", poi "la passione", "desideri e segreti", "scaramucce amorose" ; insomma espressioni di quella peste del linguaggio di cui , secondo I. Calvino, la letteratura dovrebbe creare anticorpi.
D'altronde qui le cadute linguistiche sono solo la veste calzante che ricopre una mentalit脿 ormai diffusa e convenzionale che, purtroppo, permea anche questo libro, in cui troppo viene detto in un profluvio di parole che travolge il povero lettore e gli toglie spazi di immaginazione.

"Temo che sia proprio la cattiva letteratura a riempire la testa di sentimenti falsi" (da Marai).
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