Red Girls: The Legend of the Akakuchibas by Kazuki Sakuraba, translated by Jocelyne Allen (Haikasoru, 450 pages, 2015)
There are a ton of reasons why you should be excited about/immediately grab a copy of Red Girls
(I’ll tell you those reasons below), but what makes Sakuraba’s novel
stand out is that it’s the ONLY SFF novel by a woman translated into
English this year (at least, that I’ve found). We know that women all
over the world are writing SFF, and it’s time more of their books were
translated into English.
But back to Red Girls. At just over 450 pages, it is
a multi-generational saga, focusing on three women in the Akakuchiba
family (the “red” in the title refers to the “Aka” of the family name).
Sakuraba links the passing of each generation to Japan’s
quickly-changing post-war society, and asks us to consider how each
matriarch deals with the expectations and hardships of her particular
cultural moment.
Manyo Tada, arguably the novel’s central character, even after she’s
dead, is the first matriarch we meet. Abandoned several years after WWII
in the village of Benimidori by the “outlanders” who live deep in the
mountains, Manyo is taken in and raised by a local family. Early on, she
realizes that she is clairvoyant, and many random images prove to be
flashes of future events/people. When Manyo is handpicked by the
reigning matriarch of the Akakuchiba family (and its lucrative
steelworks facility) to marry the heir, Yoji, and join the illustrious
family, she can sense the changing times.
Despite post-war prosperity, a
sense of decline hangs in the air. Young people are turning toward
western clothes and music and increasingly away from reliance on family
and community. At the end of part one, Sakuraba notes that “the
twenty-three year period from 1953 to 1975, [including] the births of
the boys and girls of clairvoyance and steel and wind, ends.”
Manyo’s children- Namida (“tear”), Kemari (“hairball,” born in the
year of the Fire Horse), Kaban (“bag”), Kodoku (“solitude”), are named
by her mother-in-law, Tatsu, for her own mysterious reasons. Each child,
in turn, exemplifies the various strains of Japanese culture as it
moves through the Cold War years and beyond. Namida participates in the
brutally competitive world of scholastic achievement; Kemari shifts from
being the rebellious leader of a girls’ motorcycle gang to becoming one
of the country’s most popular manga artists; Kaban obsesses over
televised talent shows and auditions as often as she can during her
teenage years; and Kodoku isolates himself in his room as a kid and then
as a teenager, playing video games and reading manga, convinced that
participating in society is pointless if the world is just going to end
in nuclear holocaust.
Part Two (1979-1998) focuses on Kemari’s escapades as a motorcycle
gang leader and then, with the (accidental?) death of her brother
Namida, her life as a wife, mother, and manga artist. With the male heir
gone, and the Akakuchiba family and steelworks requiring a strong male
figure to take over once Yasuyuki Akakuchuba dies, Kemari agrees to an
arranged marriage. And while she gives birth to Toko in 1984, she leaves
the girl’s upbringing to Manyo and pursues her grueling work of
churning out popular manga every week.
Toko haunts the entire story as narrator, even though she isn’t its
focus until Part Three. And it is this obsession with telling her
family’s story, as well as her own, that drives this tale of the
Akakuchiba clan. Through her memories of Manyo and Kemari, and the
stories that they told her of their childhoods and lives in post-war
Japan, Toko attempts to understand her own crushing ennui, aimlessness,
and isolation. Is she simply a product of her generation, searching for
purpose and direction? Is she trapped in a kind of stasis because her
family, the bedrock of Benimidori, has crumbled away and she doesn’t
know how to escape the rubble?
What pulls her through is her grandmother Manyo’s cryptic deathbed
confession and Toko’s subsequent investigation into her grandmother’s
clairvoyant episodes and flashes of the future. With her
sometime-boyfriend, Toko moves back through her family’s history, trying
to understand why Manyo claimed that she had murdered someone, but “not
out of hate.”
Through it all, the Akakuchiba Steelworks facility stands like an
eternal monument, a claim that Japan’s prosperity will continue forever.
And yet, as times change and international markets shift, even the
steelworks must face demolition. Ultimately, Red Girls
is a story about a family of strong women in quest of stable identities
and purposeful lives. Even fifty years later, Manyo still wonders why
she was abandoned by her outlander family. It is a question she’ll never
be able to answer, just as Japan itself must forge ahead into the 21st
century without looking back.
(first posted on SF Signal 4/21/15)
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