Ruth Ozeki is a novelist, filmmaker and Zen Buddhist priest. She is
the award-winning author of three novels: My Year of Meats,
All Over Creation and A Tale for the Time Being,
which was shortlisted for the 2013 Man Booker Prize and translated
into 28 languages. She is affiliated with the Everyday Zen
Foundation and lives in Northampton, Massachusetts, where she
teaches creative writing at Smith College and is the Grace Jarcho
Ross 1933 Professor of Humanities.
ruthozeki.com
This compassionate novel of life, love and loss glows in the dark.
Its strange, beautiful pages turn themselves. If you've lost your
way with fiction over the last year or two, let The Book of Form
and Emptiness light your way home -- DAVID MITCHELL
The Book of Form and Emptiness is a big, polyphonic, often
comic, magical-realist collage of a novel that attempts to
interrogate the most pressing issues of the age . . . at its heart
is a compelling story of human connection and the redemptive power
of art . . . Ozeki is a talented storyteller * * Guardian * *
Heart-breaking and heart-healing - a book to not only keep us
absorbed but also to help us think and love and live and listen. No
one writes quite like Ruth Ozeki and The Book of Form and
Emptiness is a triumph -- MATT HAIG
There's powerful magic here . . . Ozeki is unusually patient with
her characters, even the rebarbative ones, and she is able to
record the subtle peculiarities of other classes of beings that
more overeager writers would probably miss . . . Ozeki gives us a
metaphor for our very own American consumption disorder, our
love-hate relationship with the stuff we produce and can't let go
of * * New York Times Book Review * *
This is both an extremely vivid picture of a small family enduring
unimaginable loss, and a very powerful meditation on the way books
can contain the chaos of the world and give it meaning and order.
Annabelle and Benny Oh try to stay afloat in a sea of things, news,
substances, technological soullessness and psychiatric quagmires,
and the way they learn to live and breathe and even swim through it
all feels like the struggle we all face. The Book of Form and
Emptiness builds on the themes of A Tale for the Time
Being, and ratifies Ozeki as one of our era's most
compassionate and original minds -- DAVE EGGERS
Once again, Ozeki has created a masterpiece. Her generous heart,
remarkable imagination and brilliant mind light up every page --
KAREN JOY FOWLER
Storytelling rarely comes more capacious than Ruth Ozeki's latest
novel . . . Ozeki interconnects zen philosophy, the environmental
crisis, a critique of our mass consumer lifestyle and a playful
post-modern sensibility - one of the characters is a talking book -
within a novel that, for all its wide-ranging intellectual
restlessness, remains grounded in its characters' emotional reality
* * Daily Mail * *
Moving . . . Ozeki has considerable storytelling energies
* * Financial Times * *![]() |
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