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Catfish Rolling cover art

Catfish Rolling

By: Clara Kumagai
Narrated by: Susan Momoko-Hingley
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Summary

A dazzling debut. Magic-realism blends with Japanese myth and legend in an original story about grief, memory, time and an earthquake that shook a nation.

There's a catfish under the islands of Japan and when it rolls the land rises and falls. Sora hates the catfish whose rolling caused an earthquake so powerful it cracked time itself. It destroyed her home and took her mother. Now Sora and her scientist father live close to the zones–the wild and abandoned places where time runs faster or slower than normal. Sora is sensitive to the shifts, and her father recruits her help in exploring these liminal spaces. But it's dangerous there–and as she strays further inside in search of her mother, she finds that time distorts, memories fracture and shadows, a glimmer of things not entirely human, linger. After Sora's father goes missing, she has no choice but to venture into uncharted spaces within the time zones to find him, her mother and perhaps even the catfish itself...

Stylish, accomplished and thought-provoking story-telling explores themes of identity, philosophy, science, ecology, life, loss and love.

©2023 Clara Kumagai (P)2023 Head of Zeus

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Reality Mixed With Surreal

I thought this book was as unique as its author. She’s a curious mix of Irish, Japanese and Canadian which she also gave to her headstrong heroine Sora. It’s a nice exploration of the time concept and reminded me greatly of Yoko Ogawa’s novel The Memory Police. The tag “magical realism” made me tense up at the start because I struggle with this genre, but it’s wonderfully done weaving together one girl’s search of her mother lost after the earthquake and the Japanese myths that once again prove that every living being is connected to each other.

I really enjoyed the narrator’s performance, she gave life to Sora’s emotions. I wholeheartedly recommend this book.

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