(Translated by
Laurel Taylor and Hitomi Yoshio)
* * * * *
(Fair review based
on a review copy from the publisher via NetGalley UK.)
This well-crafted novel is a long
and enjoyable read, even though it’s all about alienation,
exclusion, poverty and injustice. Hana, of High School age but no
longer going to school, has no effective means of establishing her
identity, cannot have a bank account, access insurance, medical care,
or any of the many things which normal citizens take for granted. And
because she has no means of establishing her identity, she has no way
of getting any sort of document, or card, which allows her to
legitimise her existence. Nonetheless, females in this position can
get grey-economy or zero-hours jobs which permit them to exist (and
serve the society which excludes them) whereas it’s very hard for
males in the same boat to get ANY legal or even gig-economy position
without the help of organised crime; the price of which is constant
obedience and never-ending obligation.
As ever, in any part
of the world and not just in Japan, the existence of a mandatory
means of proving your entitlement to be part of society is, first and
foremost aimed at the exclusion from society of those whom the rich
and powerful despise, or those that they fear. That is a universal
truth and it is why this novel will speak to any thinking resident of
the United Kingdom in 2026. It will, however, be lost on the
unthinking, whether they actually constitute a majority or not.
Having said all
that, what makes this an enjoyable read is the relationship which
develops between Hana and an older woman, Kimiko, who’s been in a
similar bind for many years. Kimiko’s hopeless situation has
destroyed any ability she might once have had to scheme her way out
of her situation, but at the same time she has no qualms about
sharing any resource that she has access to with anyone who needs it.
If someone is thirsty, Kimiko tries to find something for them to
drink, if they are sad she tries to cheer them up. From a position of
being unable to help herself in any useful way, she helps others,
especially Hana, even if it’s only to get through one more day.
They get some breaks
from atypically generous landlords who fell into wealth and are not
hugely worried about IMMEDIATE payoffs, and much more sustained
assistance from a seasoned and remarkably cautious gangster who has
realised, from the experience of his elder brothers, that ambition
and greed are very dangerous things if you are part of organised
crime! Organised crime exploits societal greed: its foot soldiers are
in mortal danger the moment they cease to be content with what they
are given. He helps Hana and Kimiko as far as his own survival
permits and is perhaps the only man Hana loves; certainly he’s the
only man in Hana’s world worthy of her trust.
One of Hana’s
older female friends falls into the hands of a more typical gang
member (he mistakenly thinks he is upwardly mobile) and pays the
inevitable price, causing a crisis which breaks up the friendship
group, perhaps forever, but certainly until the Coronavirus pandemic
puts the whole of Japan into the sort of state which has been normal
for Hana all her life.
Somewhat ironically,
Hana’s greatest financial success (this doesn’t last long) comes
from the exploitation of cloned debit and credit cards: the very
instruments of her exclusion from law-abiding society! At the end,
Hana has lost everyone she loves, but that loss means they are always
with her, which is the very last thing Kimiko teaches her. She finds
peace.
Sisters in Yellow is
published in the UK by Picador on 19th of March 2026