Mayumi and the Sea of Happiness

Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$18.00  $16.74
Publisher
Europa Editions
Publish Date
Pages
272
Dimensions
5.3 X 8.25 X 0.8 inches | 0.75 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781609452698
BISAC Categories:

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Jennifer Tseng's first book The Man With My Face won the 2005 Asian American Writers' Workshop's National Poetry Manuscript Competition and a 2006 PEN American Center Open Book Award. Her second book Red Flower, White Flower, winner of the Marick Press Poetry Prize, features Chinese translations by Mengying Han and Aaron Crippen. Mayumi and the Sea of Happiness is her debut novel. She works at the West Tisbury Library on Martha's Vineyard.
Reviews
Praise for Mayumi and The Sea of Happiness

"Mayumi's trespasses and thrills are so deeply imagined that I lived her affair with her, cheering her even as I knew I would drown with her in her ecstasy. This book's fierce physicality glitters beneath the surface of every heady sentence."--Susanna Daniel, author of Stilsville and Sea Creatures

"Jennifer Tseng delivers an elegant exploration of passion and its consequences while casting her observant eye on motherhood, memory, exile, and female friendship. Carnal, witty, and slyly crafted, Mayumi and the Sea of Happiness is a sizzling fuse of a novel, with an explosion bigger and better than anything you can imagine."--Sara Levine, author of Treasure Island!!!

"This is a confession that reads like an exultation, and Mayumi's gleeful admissions will likely keep the reader turning pages at the kind of speed that inspires papercuts."--The Seattle Review of Books

"The love scenes don't lack for erotic description and detail, and Mayumi's obsessive admiration for the young man swings between coolly perceptive and discomfitingly overheated. But the precision and poetry of Tseng's writing keep the book from meandering too far in the direction [of pure romance]...Tseng explores time and place, isolation and connection, and veers more toward the lyrical than the lurid."--Kirkus Reviews