Ozeki herself, by the way, is a Buddhist priest, which is no small part of the story. Fortunately, as Nao tells the story in her diary, before ending her life, she wants to write the biography of her ancient great grandmother, an ailing Buddhist nun. Might she have already killed herself or is she still alive? Her father's already tried to kill himself. Yes, Ozeki turns herself into a character in this book and portrays herself as reading the diary in a race against a huge wave of oncoming time. Ozeki might also have called her book "A Tale of Two Shores." She discovers the schoolgirl in a diary preserved against the ocean, a diary which, thanks to the recent Japanese tsunami, washes up on the shore of her British Columbian island residence. Naoko's nickname is Nao, Nao, get it? She's clearly a creature of time as are all of us, she both assures and warns us. The time being means for our current days and also refers to one of the main characters in the book, a suicidal 16-year-old Japanese schoolgirl named Naoko. Alan Cheuse has this review.ĪLAN CHEUSE, BYLINE: "A Tale for the Time Being" offers a huge pun in its title. And finally this hour, a new novel that tells the story of two lives intersecting across an ocean after the recent tsunami in Japan.
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