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Meeting Luciano: A Novel

par Anna Esaki-Smith

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A "funny [and] enchanting" novel about a Japanese-American mother and daughter--and a legendary Italian tenor (The New Yorker).   Hanako Shimoda, recently divorced, is fixated on Luciano Pavarotti--and convinced that he will accept her invitation to dinner at her Westchester County home. To prepare for the opera star's upcoming visit, she's hired a contractor to renovate the kitchen.   Hanako's daughter, Emily, a fully assimilated American, is in a holding pattern at the moment. With no real career plan after college, she has gone back to work at her old summer job--waiting tables at the local Japanese steakhouse. Even worse than wearing a fake kimono and obi is that she's living at home with her mother. At first, her mom seems pretty much her old self: still reliving her Japanese childhood; still affecting the airs of a European sophisticate; still brewing espresso, cooking Italian, and singing arias from Rigoletto while she cleans; still idolizing Luciano Pavarotti.   But once Hanako hires the handsome Alex, Emily begins to worry. The Greek-American contractor seems to be getting very cozy with her mother, and the once-harmless Pavarotti obsession seems to have turned into full-blown delusion. Emily may have to step in to rescue her lonely mom before she completely loses it--but along the way, she may find that she's been kidding herself about a few things, too . . .   "Though humorously drawn, Esaki-Smith's novel never ridicules her slightly eccentric characters, presenting all their deliciously human faults and foibles in a warmly sympathetic manner." --Booklist   "[A] polished, gentle first novel . . . [Emily's] fraught relationship with her mother is heartfelt and complicated." --Publishers Weekly   "Sublime . . . Like the steakhouse where Emily works, which was built without a single nail, Esaki-Smith's first novel is a precisely constructed work of art, and your pleasure in discovering its multiple layers will have you singing her praises." --Newsday  … (plus d'informations)
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A very simple but thoughtful well-written first novel, about the relationship between mother and daughter. ( )
  bobbieharv | Jul 15, 2019 |
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A "funny [and] enchanting" novel about a Japanese-American mother and daughter--and a legendary Italian tenor (The New Yorker).   Hanako Shimoda, recently divorced, is fixated on Luciano Pavarotti--and convinced that he will accept her invitation to dinner at her Westchester County home. To prepare for the opera star's upcoming visit, she's hired a contractor to renovate the kitchen.   Hanako's daughter, Emily, a fully assimilated American, is in a holding pattern at the moment. With no real career plan after college, she has gone back to work at her old summer job--waiting tables at the local Japanese steakhouse. Even worse than wearing a fake kimono and obi is that she's living at home with her mother. At first, her mom seems pretty much her old self: still reliving her Japanese childhood; still affecting the airs of a European sophisticate; still brewing espresso, cooking Italian, and singing arias from Rigoletto while she cleans; still idolizing Luciano Pavarotti.   But once Hanako hires the handsome Alex, Emily begins to worry. The Greek-American contractor seems to be getting very cozy with her mother, and the once-harmless Pavarotti obsession seems to have turned into full-blown delusion. Emily may have to step in to rescue her lonely mom before she completely loses it--but along the way, she may find that she's been kidding herself about a few things, too . . .   "Though humorously drawn, Esaki-Smith's novel never ridicules her slightly eccentric characters, presenting all their deliciously human faults and foibles in a warmly sympathetic manner." --Booklist   "[A] polished, gentle first novel . . . [Emily's] fraught relationship with her mother is heartfelt and complicated." --Publishers Weekly   "Sublime . . . Like the steakhouse where Emily works, which was built without a single nail, Esaki-Smith's first novel is a precisely constructed work of art, and your pleasure in discovering its multiple layers will have you singing her praises." --Newsday  

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