Rating:  Summary: Fascinating, Informative and Brilliant writing Review: I happened to be in the bookstore when Ms. Ozeki was doing a reading. I chuckled and laughed throughout. I decided to buy the book thinking that it may not be able to sustain such a strong introduction. But it did. It has vivid characters, and the plot just keeps on moving in unexpected but completely believable ways. And all I can say is that I shall not be eating beef ever again. I congratulate you and thank you, Ruth Ozeki.
Rating:  Summary: A fascinating, smart, eco-friendly, humorous book... Review: This is simply the best book I have read in years. I couldn't put it down. Rarely does an author expose a major industry's flagrant injustices with such wit and humor. I was moved to both tears and laughter. Ozeki's wonderful prose brings both Japanese culture and American culture to life. This is a great first novel! Campai Ozeki-san!
Rating:  Summary: Superb, unusual, quirky,fascinating! Review: Simply superb first novel! I literally stayed up all night just to get this finished. Laugh out loud funny, and incredily horrifying at the same time. If this is an accurate rendering of the meat industry in the US, all I can say is "I'm with Oprah"!
Rating:  Summary: MY YEAR OF MEATS has won rave reviews! Review: "Character gems and exquisite plotting make this a treasure to read, but the real sizzle is in the take on beef." -- Kirkus, 4/1/98, starred review
"A very cool book, satirical but never mean, funny, peopled by fully inhabited characters who are both blind and self-aware."
-- John Sayles, director of Matewan, Lone Star, and Men With Guns
"Fluent entertaining prose."
-- Publishers Weekly, 3/30/98, starred review
Rating:  Summary: East "Meats" West Review: "My Year of Meats" is an ambitious novel that defies being confined to one type of genre or style. What starts as a smart and funny satire of American and Japanese cultures ultimately morphs into an examination into some serious and tragic subject matter (and not just limited to the meat industry). The novel uses multiple narrative perspectives (primarily Jane Takagi-Little, an American documentary filmmaker of Japanese descent, and Akiko Ueno, a repressed Japanese housewife) and intersperses a traditional narrative style with faxes and letters to move the plot along. While the shifting tone and many points of view may frustrate some readers, one thinks Ozeki is purposely placing the reader on a roller-coaster ride. One can never really anticipate what will be around the next corner. The paperback version also includes an interview with the author and discussion questions. One can see why this book has become a favorite of reading groups. The novel is filled with plenty of topics worthy of debate -- from the meaning of the American dream or "ideal" to each of the characters' issues with abuse and denial in their lives. Nevertheless, "Meats" is entertaining while never being heavy-handed (though an unflinching look at a slaughterhouse is perhaps the biggest blow to the meat industry since Oprah's beef trial and Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle"). In the spirit of Jane's wickedly sarcastic faxes to her meat-obsessed Japanese boss, I would have to say that this is a "well done" novel and definitely a "rare" treat.
Rating:  Summary: My advice: Read something else Review: I'm glad so many people have found pleasure reading this book. As for me, I read about 25 pages and found no reason to read another page.
Rating:  Summary: it's all about the image Review: This book is excellent because it's an unforgiving romp through modern day America and the hurdles it holds for artists, people of multicultural heredity, and women. It's also an unforgiving look at some of the Japanese misconceptions of America and how they're perpetuated.
What I really love about this book is the role-reversal of strength and the confrontation with one's own self-image.
The other real clincher is that the book hits on a real life issue - medicines in our meat - in a way that hits the reader right in the gut. It's a well-researched heads up for our social consciousness.
Rating:  Summary: Interesting Review: I liked this book. It was very well written, thoughtful, had strong character development and also something unique to a lot of fiction these days: a plot.
Rating:  Summary: Propaganda with stereotype characters Review: Really enjoyable fiction. Had I known the subject matter of the book, I likely wouldn't have read. I only read for pleasure and dislike being in any way preached at or lectured. Ozeki's book does a great job of being excellent fiction, whilst still carrying an important message. I am already anti-beef, due to environmental issues, rain forest destruction, and animal cruelty issues. I wish all of my beef-eating Atkins friends would read this book.
Rating:  Summary: Book that crosses culture gap of East and West Review: The weird title was what caught my attention. When I started reading, I thought, oh no, another book referring to Shonagon but I was truly suprised by how engaging this book is. I enjoyed every minute of it. Ms. Ozeki writes with a very authentic voice and everything flowed, even if the story involved switching from the U.S. and Japan and vice versa. I would recommend this book to anyone who is concerned about meat production in our country, for anyone who is caught between cultures like Jane Takagi, and for anyone who just wants a slice of Japanese and American culture.
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