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Plum Wine by Angela Davis-Gardner
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Plum Wine (edition 2007)

by Angela Davis-Gardner

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3561772,277 (3.48)22
Plum Wine. Angela Davis-Gardner. 2006. Friend Lorie suggested this book, and I am so glad. It is a beautifully written love story! Barbara Jefferson is teaching English at a university in Tokyo. Michi, Barbara’s neighbor, mentor, and dear friend dies unexpectedly and leaves her a tansu chest filled with 20 bottles of wine dated by year. Each bottle is wrapped in rice paper that is covered with Japanese writing. Michi must have wanted Barbara to learn her history by reading this odd journal. At a memorial service for Michi, Barbara meets Seiji who had known Michi for years. He agrees to translate. They must meet secretly. It is not proper in 1960s Japan for the American teacher to meet with a man. As they fall in love, Barbara realizes there is more to Seiji’s relationship with Michi that he has told her. In addition to being a lovely love story, the books provides glimpse of life and culture in Japan in the aftermath of Hiroshima. ( )
  judithrs | Jun 15, 2015 |
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One of the best books I've read in a very long time... ( )
  bookishblond | Oct 24, 2018 |
Barbara Jefferson is an American teaching in Japan, and her professor, Michi, who was like a mother to her, died and leaves her a tansu chest full of plum wine. Each bottle of wine was made in a different year and has a paper wrapped aorund it with the story of that year written on it in Japanese. It's an odd inheritance for Barbara, who doesn't speak or read Japanese. She wants to read the story and know more about Michi, as she realizes she didn't know that much about her personally, although she was close to her in many ways.

An acquaintance of Michi's and fellow hibakusha (survivor of the Hiroshima bombing), Seiji, a moody and talented pottery artist, helps Barbara translate the papers. Their relationship grows, and with it, brings confusion to Barbara's world.

I liked and disliked this book. The interweaving of the stories about "kitsune," Japanese folklore about foxes, the stories of the hibakusha, and descriptions of Japan give the story great atmosphere and transport you to Japan. So those are the good points of hte book. But, as the cover says in one of its critic review, "A heartrending story of love and loss . . . .masterful."

There were a few standout scenes in the book. Michi and Barbara's visit to the Buddha of Kamakura, and feeling they were in the womb of the Buddha was interesting and provided a great backdrop for conversations about mothers and relationships. I liked Barbara's speculation about her mother's feelings: "My mother always wanted a daughter like her, someone adventurous but conventional. A suit-and-pants kind of woman who takes flying lessons." ( )
  gildaclone | Dec 18, 2016 |
Plum Wine. Angela Davis-Gardner. 2006. Friend Lorie suggested this book, and I am so glad. It is a beautifully written love story! Barbara Jefferson is teaching English at a university in Tokyo. Michi, Barbara’s neighbor, mentor, and dear friend dies unexpectedly and leaves her a tansu chest filled with 20 bottles of wine dated by year. Each bottle is wrapped in rice paper that is covered with Japanese writing. Michi must have wanted Barbara to learn her history by reading this odd journal. At a memorial service for Michi, Barbara meets Seiji who had known Michi for years. He agrees to translate. They must meet secretly. It is not proper in 1960s Japan for the American teacher to meet with a man. As they fall in love, Barbara realizes there is more to Seiji’s relationship with Michi that he has told her. In addition to being a lovely love story, the books provides glimpse of life and culture in Japan in the aftermath of Hiroshima. ( )
  judithrs | Jun 15, 2015 |
This is one of my favorite books I have read for my book club. It is set in the 1960's at a women's university in Tokyo. The main character, Barbara is teaching English at this school. She has a wonderful, older friend named Michiko who leaves her a chest full of plum wine upon her death. On each bottle of wine is wrapped a writing of what has happened the previous year. Helping her to translate is Sejii who has some secrets of his own. The book moves back and forth in time. Many family stories are uncovered, especially about the atomic bomb in Hiroshima.

This was an easy read, but at the same time I think it has many points for discussion. It certainly wasn't a light read. It had much turning pages quickly (or clicks as I read it on my kindle).

One of the best things about the books was the atmosphere and language. The author did an amazing job of making one feel like you were in Japan.

If you like you books tied neatly, with all questions answered you may be a little frustrated by this book.

I loved this book and I think many people would like it too. I had never heard of this author before but I'd like to read more books by her. ( )
  erica471 | Jan 5, 2014 |
i thought it was kind of dry and boring but my book club really liked it ( )
  dawnlovesbooks | May 15, 2013 |
This novel, set in Japan in the 60s, is definitely on the minimalist side. It’s the story of Barbara, a woman from North Carolina, who goes to Japan to teach for a few years. The constant slight confusion of the protagonist is very familiar to me, since I’ve also experienced a lot of culture shock in my life.

The story that’s grafted onto this doesn’t feel entirely natural, but it is heartfelt. Barbara is befriended by Michi, a Japanese teacher who is like a mother to her, and when Michi dies, Barbara inherits her chest of stories. Looking for a translator for the writing, Barbara falls in love with Seiji, a Japanese man, a potter. Both Michi and Seiji lived in Hiroshima when the bomb fell, both lost their families, and both remained wounded.

From her exploration of Michi’s life, and from her growing and then fading intimacy with Seiji, Barbara learns what it means to be a survivor of Hiroshima. The US Vietnam War is also part of the story, as Barbara must explain it to her students.

The novel is written very plainly, one might even say in a Japanese style. Everything is suggested rather than spoken. But at times it feels too sparse, and the prose seems utilitarian rather than poetic.
( )
  astrologerjenny | Apr 24, 2013 |
I found this book at a library sale. I enjoy getting books I have never heard of at library sales, maybe partly because of the risk involved. It sounded good: a suspense novel about a young American woman teaching in Japan. Lee Smith called it “memorable” on the cover. I like reading about foreign settings. I myself applied to teach for a year in Japan once, and ended up teaching for a year in France.

In this book review I must be diligent to apply John Updike’s six rules for reviewers, which are well worth reading and following.

Plum Wine is not the book I hoped it would be. It has many merits, such as describing the effects of the atomic bomb on the people who lived in Hiroshima. I learned more than I knew about that particular experience.

The premise is intriguing: a woman who dies mysteriously and bequeaths her scroll-diaries to the American teacher Barbara, who then has to make sense of the gift. It is cute to read about the Japanese people’s efforts to pronounce her name—”Balabala.” But is the book as good as it could be, given what it is? It is hard to pin down what is lacking.

Some of the things that annoy me most about the book are actually very true to life. I was frustrated with the main character because she makes only the most meager, half-hearted efforts to learn Japanese, even though her failure to do so isolates her and magnifies all her problems. However, this seems to be very common among short-term American expatriates.

She has a superficial relationship with the people around her and doesn’t seek their guidance in very important matters. But I experienced a similar estrangement when I lived in France. It was hard for me to obtain guidance from the French people I knew. Whether it is caused by pride or by cultural barriers, this is realistic.

Barbara develops an intense devotion to a Japanese lady she seems to have known only very slightly. This seems contrived to the reader, but it is true that when you are all alone in a foreign country, you can become strongly attached to the people you are thrown together with, especially the other expatriates, without knowing much about their identity back home. We cannot blame the main character for caring deeply about someone she didn’t know very well.

Maybe the most unpleasant thing for me was reading about her unhealthy relationship with a Japanese man. Here Barbara is beginning to get to know Seiji better:

“Would you be interested to see my new work?”
She followed him into the pottery. There were several pieces laid out on a table. All of them had a jagged, unfinished look, a primal quality. “I have made by hand instead of on wheel,” he said as she touched the sharp edges.
“They’re powerful,” she said. “Strongly emotional.”
“Perhaps because I think of you as I make them,” he said. She took his hand and kissed it; he’d never expressed his feelings so openly before.


Of course he turns out to be exactly the kind of cad you sense he is in this passage, and the innocent American girl walks right into his trap. I suppose the story has been repeated over and over again around the world for centuries. It is true and lifelike, I am sure. But I felt like I was taken to a foreign country and then kept in a small room, taken out rarely to see only a few blurry scenes of that world. ( )
  theonetruesteph | Mar 30, 2013 |
Barbara Jefferson is a young American teaching at a Japanese school in the late 1960's. She forms a strong attachment to a fellow teacher who dies under questionable circumstances and turns out to have been a survivor of Hiroshima. As the story unfolds, Barbara meets and falls in love with a Japanese man. The mysterious connection between her lover and her dead friend is a mystery, the clues to which are hidden in a series of writings or journals which have been left to her by her friend. Davis-Gardner uses her story to give the reader some insight into the lasting tragedy that followed Hiroshima and, without making moral judgments about the war, at least grants a gentle perspective that Americans do not often see. Her depictions of Japanese life are delicate and seem very genuine. Altogether, a very nice book. ( )
  turtlesleap | Feb 5, 2011 |
I enjoyed this book about a young teacher at a college for women in Japan. Angela Davis-Gardner, the author, introduces us into a very sad world of which we, as Americans, are probably not even aware. It is the world of the victims of Hiroshima.

Although the main story appears to be in the late 1960's, it takes us back to that horrible August day 1945, in Hiroshima, where we learn of the atomic blast from several of those who experienced it. The fallout from that blast is still taking its toll on the characters of the main story. ( )
  fglass | Jan 25, 2010 |
a sweet story of an American woman teaching in Japan in 1966, and how she learns about Japan through the New Year's writings left to her by a Japanese friend. These writings, spanning four decades, lead her to a love affair and a deeper understanding of the legacy of the Hiroshima bombing and a little of her own relationship with her family in the US.

While the events and their outcome are not surprising, they are satisfying. The images of Japan and the description of the culture as seen through the eyes of the protagonist are lovingly recounted. And the occasional struggle of people to understand each other across the language divide is rendered with great tenderness. ( )
  ffortsa | Dec 20, 2009 |
An American woman in Tokyo during the time when America is involved in Vietnam, teaches English to students at the Kodaira College and finds that her friend has bequeathed a chest of plum wine to her following her death. As she opens the drawers, she finds each bottle tagged with the year, but also wrapped in paper which she discovers to contain Japanese calligraphy which she is unable to read.

She meets a potter who knew her friend, Michi Nakamoto, well and decides to ask him to translate the writings. Therein she soon discovers more than she had expected. She is drawn into the shadowy world of the Hiroshima survivors and the tragic consequences the atom bomb had on human lives on that fateful day. These survivors are considered ill-fated and some of them choose not to disclose the fact that they are from Hiroshima for fear of being shunned by other members of society.

The letters take her back to stories about Michi's grandmother Ko, Michi's mother and Michi's daughter. There is a surprising twist to the family history, and perhaps a quest that requires a friend to close. The stories are delicately told and offer such a depth of expression and feeling that one cannot help but be drawn into the human drama that unfolded in that year.

There are many wonderful expressions in this book, and none more poignant than the potter describing how, as a 12 year old who survived the bomb, he looked at shadow prints (pieces of ground cut out around shadowy figures) to try identify if his sister and father had cast these 'shadows' if they had been incinerated in the blast.

A forbidden love affair develops between the teacher and the secretive potter. I'm not going to hand out a spoiler as to the outcome of this love affair, but the ending was very touching.

The teacher, through the letters and through her interactions with one of her students, evolves gradually and finds she can no longer hide behind an apathy towards both the bombing of Hiroshima and America's involvement in the Vietnam war.

This is a wonderfully quiet book... quiet because the author has managed to capture the essence of the Japanese and their social dictates. The details of life in Japan in the 70s is particularly resonant. ( )
7 vote cameling | Sep 28, 2009 |
This love story confronts the issues of how our own personal pain from past experience affects our ability to love in the future. The setting of this book takes you to post Hiroshima Japan. The affects on the people of this place and how it has affected others around the world. Not only does it look at war it also embraces the issues that are placed on children who are not given the love that most children take for granted. Sometimes we can overcome our past and sometimes we cannot. I especially liked the setting of Japan and the descriptions of the beauty of the land. Being able to have a small window into the world of another culture was a pleasure for me. While this was a Love Story it was more about our ability to look at what responsibility we each have to take in our own personal decisions. I believe this to be the best part of this book. While the stories themselves were adequate it was the ability to cause the reader to explore their own feelings regarding themselves and the world that truly made it worth the read. ( )
2 vote silverheron | Apr 19, 2008 |
Twenty years after the bombing of Hiroshima, Barbara Jefferson is a young American woman teaching English Lit. at a woman's college in Tokyo. Her interest in Japan stems from her mother's stint in Japan as a journalist the late 30's as means of resolving the distance in their mother-daughter relationship. Instead she finds Michi, another college professor who takes Barbara in and "mothers" her, helping her navigate Japanese culture.

The book opens with Michi's death and bequest to Barbara: a mysterious tansu (chest) of homemade plum wine, each bottle wrapped in a Japanese manuscript. The manuscripts are New Years letters of Michi and her mother.

The narrative revolves around Michi, though she is the absent character throughout the book. Michi, a survivor of Hiroshima and mother of a recently deceased microcephalic daughter (a result of the radiation from the bomb), has also had a strained relationship with her own mother. The circumstances of her life and death are a mystery that Barbara intends to solve. She enlists the help of a potter, Seiji, also a Hiroshima survivor, in translating the manuscripts. They predictably become romantically involved.

Barbara's female students and fellow female professors provide her with insights and warnings along the way. The book, and the relationship between Barbara and Seiji end shortly after the 20th anniversary commemoration of the bombing of Hiroshima.

Strong themes through the book are:
- Japanese Kitsune (fox) folklore which often attributes fox characteristics to women, but perhaps the fox in this book is not the female.
- the concept of sin and redemption (Western culture) vs. shame and guilt (Eastern culture).
-the social plight of the victims of war.

Despite these themes, this is not a deep philosophical story but rather an enjoyable read as a mystery romance. ( )
2 vote tangledthread | Dec 7, 2007 |
Barbara Jefferson, who is teaching English in Japan, receives an intriguing bequest at the start of this novel. A fellow professor, with whom she has had a budding friendship, has just died and left her a chest full of plum wine. Barbara discovers writing on each of the bottle wrappers and learns that these are the New Year reflections of her colleague and her colleague's mother.

In an attempt to translate these writings, she contacts Seiji, a potter who seems to have been a family friend of Barbara's deceased professor-friend. Unsurprisingly, a sort of romance develops between the two as they delve into the New Year writings -- writings which tell the story of Hiroshima and what it is like to be a survivor of that terrible bombing.

However, the relationship refuses to progress, as Seiji, also a survivor of the bombing, is obviously holding something back, and Barbara wants too much of him. While the bits about Hiroshima are interesting, the relationship between these two is infuriating. Not only because of its lack of progress, but because Barbara is so often whiny and needy, and Seiji runs so hot and cold that one wonders why on Earth Barbara doesn't tell him to take a hike.

Some of the events going on around Barbara are rather fascinating, too. For instance, a Japanese perspective on Vietnam, and a really great subplot involving one of Barbara's more radical students.

However, it fails as a love story, and, disappointingly, I didn't learn as much about Japanese pottery as I though I might either. Perhaps I am not the best judge of this, but this book seemed to lack a sort of distinct Japanese-ness that I've come to expect from similar novels as well.

For a Hiroshima story, I would recommend The Street of a Thousand Blossoms instead. (It also, come to think of it, has much better romances in it as well.) For something with a more Western perspective on Japanese culture (wherein, by the way, one does actually learn something about Japanese pottery, and tea ceremony), I would recommend The Tea House Fire. I'm not sure I'd recommend Plum Wine, however, for much of anything. ( )
1 vote C.Vick | Sep 26, 2007 |
This was a slow-starting but good book about an American woman teaching in Japan. She inherits a box of plum wine from a mother-figure (fellow teacher) who has died. Around each bottle of wine is a letter corresponding to the year the wine was made. The woman needs a translator to discover the history she has been left and finds one in a potter who is also a survivor of the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
What follows is a love story and an unfolding of the dead womans life, teaching the American about Japanese culture and opening her eyes to the lasting effects of atomic war. ( )
  titterington | May 24, 2007 |
American goes to Japan to teach school in 1969. She learns about the effects of the Atom Bomb has on the citizens of that community. ( )
  bettyjo | Aug 7, 2006 |
From Booklist
*Starred Review* Seiji, a potter, tells Barbara, a young and lonely American teaching at a Tokyo university, that it is a tradition in Japan to write about the year past as the new year begins. This practice was cherished by Michiko, a professor who befriended Barbara, and by Michiko's mother before her, as Barbara discovers after Michiko's sudden death and surprise bequest to Barbara of a wooden chest containing bottles of plum wine, one for each year from 1939 to 1966, the present, each wrapped in paper covered with writing. Unable to read Japanese, Barbara asks Seiji to translate the papers, unaware that he and Michiko are hibakusha, Hiroshima survivors. As she and Seiji embark on a painfully complicated love affair, Barbara struggles to understand the horror of what Michiko and Seiji suffered at the hands of her countrymen while her students question her about America's escalation of the war in Vietnam. Davis-Gardner's exceptionally sensitive and enveloping novel illuminates with quiet intensity, psychological suspense, and narrative grace the obdurate divide between cultures, the collision between love and war, and, most piercingly, the horrific legacy of Hiroshima. But Davis-Gardner's ravishing tale also celebrates the solace of stories, and the transcendent bonds people form under the cruelest of circumstances. ( )
This review has been flagged by multiple users as abuse of the terms of service and is no longer displayed (show).
  jlcampbell05 | Jan 8, 2007 |
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