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A review by ladislara
The Memory Police by Yōko Ogawa
adventurous
dark
mysterious
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
4.5
This is my second book by Yōko Ogawa. The first one I've read, The Housekeeper and the Professor, touched me by it's simplicity and poetry.
This one is no different. The story is set in a fictional island in which is common for everyday objects to simply disappear. One day is perfume, the other day is hats, the other is all the ferries. Every day when something new disappears the population of the island simply goes to the river to dispose of all the objects or burn them, since they no longer recognize them or have any memory of what they mean.
But there are those who simply can't forget the disappeared things. I in order to make sure no trace of the objects is left, the Memory Police was created and starts watching the citizens' every move.
The setting is dark and tense, but somehow Ogawa's prose seem to float in the air. There's such a delicacy in the way she describes the main characters and their relation to themselves that you almost don't feel the weight that is hanging over all of them.
The perfect passivity and submission of the island's inhabitants is so well set into the plot that you can't help but feeling that that's the natural response to such strange phenomena.
And yet, it's very telling of people's mass behavior. How people, despite all the disturbance that the disappearances cause (one day even calendars and dates disappear), tend to go on living like nothing happened in order to fit in with the crowd.
But there are those who simply can't forget the disappeared things. I in order to make sure no trace of the objects is left, the Memory Police was created and starts watching the citizens' every move.
The setting is dark and tense, but somehow Ogawa's prose seem to float in the air. There's such a delicacy in the way she describes the main characters and their relation to themselves that you almost don't feel the weight that is hanging over all of them.
The perfect passivity and submission of the island's inhabitants is so well set into the plot that you can't help but feeling that that's the natural response to such strange phenomena.
And yet, it's very telling of people's mass behavior. How people, despite all the disturbance that the disappearances cause (one day even calendars and dates disappear), tend to go on living like nothing happened in order to fit in with the crowd.
But of course, there's also resistance and those who are determined to keep remembering, despite all the risks.
Overall this was a great read, and I can't wait to read some more of her work.