The classic Japanese bestseller published in English for the very first time - a darkly funny and relatable book portraying the lives of five women
The classic Japanese bestseller published in English for the very first time - a darkly funny and relatable book portraying the lives of five women'Witty, wise and thought-provoking' Cecelia Ahern
'Crackles and pops with humour, empathy and intelligence' Lisa Owens, author of
Not Working'So brilliantly written that I kept trying to memorise sentences in order to repeat them to people later' Roxy Dunn, author of
As Young as ThisIzumi needs to get a job. Haruka needs to stop talking about how she once had cancer. Kato needs to get through a shift at the convenience store without being harassed. Mito needs to break up with her boyfriend - or marry him. Sumie just needs somewhere to live. In this classic Japanese bestseller, published in English twenty-five years after it took Japan by storm, the lives of five ordinary women are depicted with irresistible humour and searing emotional insight.Details
ISBN13: 9780349019222
Format: Paperback / softback
Number of Pages: 288
Edition:
Publication Date: 08 Jul 2025
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
Publication City, Country: London, United Kingdom
Dimensions (cm): 21.2(H)x13.4(L)x2.6(W)305
Weight (gm): 305
Author Biography
Fumio Yamamoto burst onto the Japanese literary scene in 1999 when she won the Yoshikawa Eiji New Writer's Prize for her book
Loveaholic. Her follow-up in 2000,
The Dilemmas of Working Women, won the prestigious Naoki Prize in Literature, before becoming a bestselling phenomenon. Her final novel,
Rotations and Revolutions, was awarded both the Shimasei Literature Prize and the Chuo Koron Prize in 2021, and her journals, offering an intimate portrait of dealing with depression and then with pancreatic cancer, also became hugely popular. Yamamoto passed away in 2021 in Karuizawa, Nagano.
Brian Bergstrom is a lecturer and translator who has lived in Chicago, Kyoto, and Yokohama, and is currently based in Montreal. His most recent translations include
Sunrise: Radiant Stories by award-winning author Erika Kobayashi and
Slow Down by Marxist philosopher Kohei Saito.
Reviews
Off-beat, witty, wise and thought-provoking, these darkly comic stories portray five unique women as they deal with the societal pressures that come with being a woman in their world -- Cecelia Ahern
What an engaging, witty, and unique book. So brilliantly written that I kept trying to memorise sentences in order to repeat them to people later. What a win for the English language that we're finally getting to experience Yamamoto's inimitable voice -- Roxy Dunn, author of As Young as This
An offbeat, bold and subversive portrait of contemporary womanhood, full of brilliantly unconventional characters.
The Dilemmas of Working Women crackles and pops with humour, empathy and intelligence -- Lisa Owens, author of Not Working
The Dilemmas of Working Women is a delight. With acute insight and sly humour, Fumio Yamamoto depicts the lives of modern Japanese women in all their complexity. The characters, in their quirky idiosyncrasies, are deeply familiar; their stoicisms heartbreaking -- Yoon Choi, author of Skinship
Here are people caught between loss and regeneration. The struggles of their forlorn hearts are depicted with a light, graceful touch. There will come a point in all of our lives when we will need Fumio Yamamoto's writing -- Saou Ichikawa, author of Hunchback
An audacious five-story collection populated by women bluntly eschewing expectations ... Yamamoto's empathic characters - even a quarter-century after their debut - remain timeless figures of strength and resilience * Shelf Awareness *
This award-winning best-seller captures the modern woman in a dark, unflinching portrait * Booklist *