One Hot Summer in Kyoto bookcover

One Hot Summer in Kyoto

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Description

The tale of English teacher Peter Meadowes, who flees to Kyoto for a summer vacation and finds himself lusting after every woman he sees . . .


Hot and sticky describes the ancient Japanese city of Kyoto in summer. And that is just the situation Peter Meadowes finds himself in when he flees to Kyoto for his summer vacation. During the rest of the year the middle-aged Meadowes teaches in Tokyo, a circumstance which conveniently enables him to leave his commanding wife (who hates Japan) back in England.

In the old capital Meadowes also expects to find relief from Noriko, his grim Japanese mistress. But in the small wood-and-paper Japanese house he has rented, he finds something unexpected: another woman to desire. Kazumi is seductive, yet she always manages to slip away. Then Noriko arrives, oddly possessive but sharing giggles with Kazumi--perhaps about Meadowes's prowess? Next on the scene is Miss Goto, polite, apologetic, a serious lover of theater who turns an elaborately staged seduction into a comedy of errors. When wife Monica shows up from England, Meadowes must choose . . . and fast.

John Haylock's novel vividly evokes the languid torpor of summer in the fabled city of temples and gardens. Yet hidden within this steamy farce about obsessive lust is an underbelly of duplicity, discontent, and fear. When making his choice, Peter Meadowes confronts the love-hate relationship that afflicts the typical gaijin--foreigner--in Japan. Remaining in Japan may be impossible, but escaping only creates the desire to return.


Product Details

PublisherStone Bridge Press
Publish DateJuly 01, 1998
Pages170
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781880656082
Dimensions8.5 X 5.5 X 0.5 inches | 0.6 pounds

About the Author

John Haylock is the author of many works, including five books in Japan, short stories in a wide variety of journals and anthologies, and journalism in a range of publications including Blackwood's Magazine, London Magazine, Japan Times, and Gay Times.

Reviews

"Consistently entertaining."

--The Spectator

"Gloriously ironic."

--Donald Richie

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