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Sayonara: A Novel

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

From a great master of historical fiction comes a brilliant tale of love amid war. James A. Michener combines powerful storytelling with deep sensitivity in this novel of a U.S. Army man who, against... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Best love story

It is a very emotional & touching book. Shed a few tears. I love this book.

Not your average love story

To me, Sayonara is an amazing story of a very unlikely couple. Maybe it is simply the woman in me that enjoys reading of a great love tale, but this novel truly hit me. In the beginning Lloyd is a man that would not think twice about dating a Japanese woman simply because of her race. But as time goes on, and the storyline progresses, his perspective begins to shift. He sees Hana-ogi not as a JAPANESE woman, but as a warm-hearted, loving human being. And although both of their careers forbid their relationship, neither one of them is willing to give up the bond they share. Their friends Joe Kelly and Katsumi are only another example of how love conquers, or rather, should conquer, all. Sayonara is not just a sappy love story. It is a tale of struggle and the overcoming of obstacles merely to be with the one you were meant to be with.

A Different Time, A Different Place

This is not my Japan - I was stationed there a generation later. Michener's prose describes Japan as it was during the Korean war. I still remember the vendors selling roasted chestnuts or skewers of yakitori beside the street. Today we have, God forbid, MacDonalds and Starbucks on the streets of Hiroshima. These are not my girls - most of the Japanese women I met, outside of the bar scene, were students in English classes. Their reasons for speaking with gaijin (foreigners) were varied. Some wanted to learn English for work. Some expected to travel. One had a sister who was married to an American. The girl who is now my wife of 25 years was a rebel who just did not want to conform to the strictures of Japanese society. I have to admit, I was first attracted because she was the cutest girl I had ever seen. She's still is, for me. Were there communication problems? Yes, at first. Now, probably no different from any other couple. Could Gruver's attraction to Hana Ogi have been purely physical? Maybe. Probably not. Sayonara isn't history - but the "tea ceremony" I saw in Kyoto last week wasn't real either.Enjoy this book - it's a window on a different time and a different place and a different people. It's a wonderful read if you can shift your perspecive and accept things as they were.

I was very shocked...

at how great this novel turned out to be and I really like being surprised in reading. I had a box of unread mass market paperbacks lying around for over a year. I was bored yesterday and picked up several to choose from. I started on the first couple of pages of "Sayonara" and I simply couldn't put it down. I thought the themes were very contemporary and the writing style seemed modern. I was surprised to see the publish date in the 1950s! I was drawn into a beautiful foreign world seen through the eyes of a staunch military man. His metamorphasis into a human being was beautiful. Stereotypes are common among nearly everyone, even if they are unfair. We can learn, like Gruver, to see past the image we are told to see. Even all American women are not carbon copies.

Beautiful

This is a beautiful tale of love and war. Though I am young, I have enjoyed the powerful way James Michener had written 'Sayonara'. I feel symphatetic towards the end for the dashing Major Llyod Gruver and his beautiful Hana-ogi. This has been a very enjoyable book and I recommend other people to read it.

This book is NOT for the easily-offended.

I read this book in high school (in the 60's) and saw the movie several years after that (the endings are not the same), and must confess I'd forgotten just how racist and how chauvinistic even the sympathetic characters are. What's not in question is that things really WERE this way in 1953 when the book was published - what is in question is whether the average reader understood what Michener was trying to do in pointing it out. Given that racism (and chauvinism)are still problems in American society today, 45 years later, I'd say they didn't.
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