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Marie Mutsuki Mockett

    Marie Mutsuki Mockettová sa vo svojej tvorbe zameriava na témy osobnej a kolektívnej straty a spôsoby jej prekonávania. Jej písanie je hlboko ovplyvnené osobnou skúsenosťou smútku po jadrovej katastrofe vo Fukušime a zároveň po náhlej smrti jej otca. S mimoriadnou citlivosťou prepája pozemské s nadpozemským, pričom zdôrazňuje duchovné a rituálne aspekty vyrovnávania sa so žiaľom. Jej pútavý a neokázalý štýl robí z autorky sprievodkyňu, ktorej spoločnosť čitatelia vyhľadávajú aj v tých najťažších životných okamihoch.

    The Tree Doctor
    • A startling, erotic novel about the need to balance care for others with care for one’s selfWhen the unnamed narrator of Marie Mutsuki Mockett’s stirring second novel returns to Carmel, California, to care for her mother, she finds herself stranded at the outset of the disease. With her husband and children back in Hong Kong, and her Japanese mother steadily declining in an assisted living facility two hours away, she becomes preoccupied with her mother’s garden―convinced it contains a kind of visual puzzle―and the dormant cherry tree within it.Caught between tending to an unwell parent and the weight of obligation to her distant daughters and husband, she becomes isolated and unmoored. She soon starts a torrid affair with an arborist who is equally fascinated by her mother’s garden, and together they embark on reviving it. Increasingly engrossed by the garden, and by the awakening of her own body, she comes to see her mother's illness as part of a natural order in which things are perpetually living and dying, consuming and being consumed. All the while, she struggles to teach (remotely) Lady Murasaki’s eleventh-century novel, The Tale of Genji, which turns out to resonate eerily with the conditions of contemporary society in the grip of a pandemic.The Tree Doctor is a powerful, beautifully written novel full of bodily pleasure, intense observation of nature, and a profound reckoning with the passage of time both within ourselves and in the world we inhabit.

      The Tree Doctor