• Produktbild: Convenience Store Woman
  • Produktbild: Convenience Store Woman
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Convenience Store Woman A Novel

Aus der Reihe Best of Granta
27
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13,99 € UVP 17,00 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.09.2019

Verlag

Ingram Publisher Services

Seitenzahl

192

Maße (L/B/H)

17,6/12,6/1,5 cm

Gewicht

160 g

Übersetzt von

Ginny Tapley Takemori

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-8021-2962-8

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.09.2019

Verlag

Ingram Publisher Services

Seitenzahl

192

Maße (L/B/H)

17,6/12,6/1,5 cm

Gewicht

160 g

Übersetzt von

Ginny Tapley Takemori

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-8021-2962-8

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: GPSR Kontakt

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  • Bewertung

    5/5

    07.02.2022

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    Society from the Outside

    The protagonist is relatable in her need to understand the world around her. There are so many rules which she observes openly in her mind and which others in her story unconsciously conform to. It is a great read to immerse yourself in.

  • Bewertung

    Book Circle Community

    5/5

    04.05.2025

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    Keiko vs. the World

    Convenience Store Woman is a brilliant, weird (in a good kind of way) and defiant little book that hit way closer to home than I expected. Sayaka Murata crafts a hilarious and deeply poignant story about Keiko Furukura, a woman who just wants to live life on her own terms (even if society insists she’s broken for it). Keiko finds comfort in the routine of her convenience store job, and honestly, I felt that. The story challenges the idea that happiness must come from relationships, babies or ‘normal’ life goals. It instead offers a quiet celebration of choosing your own path, even if it confuses everyone else. It’s sharp, funny and feels ‘important’. And with ‘important’ I mean: Keiko’s story is more than a quirky character study; it’s a critique of how hard society works to force us into roles we never asked for.

  • Maréme

    5/5

    11.01.2025

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    Keiko passt nicht rein

    Wie sieht das Leben einer Person aus, die nicht den Vorstellungen der Gesellschaft entspricht? Auf eine sehr erfrischende Art erzählt Sayaka Murata die Geschichte von Keiko, einer Frau deren Leben sich um ihren Job im Supermarkt dreht, wie sie sich nicht als Mensch wahrnimmt sondern regelrecht als Bestandteil des Marktes sieht "a convenience store animal" . Ihr Umfeld kann sie nicht verstehen und versucht sie deshalb zu "heilen". Warum ist eine 36 jährige Frau so zufrieden mit ihrem Leben, welches so gar nicht der Norm entspricht? Hier bekommt man einen Einblick auf die Schattenseiten einer Gesellschaft aus dem Blickwinkel einer psychisch erkrankten Frau. Toll geschrieben, dieses Buch bleibt in Erinnerung.

  • Bewertung

    5/5

    01.01.2025

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    A. quick read, basically about an autistic woman

    I liked it, it moved quickly and Keiko is clearly autistic, though that is never explicitly brought up. I recognized it almost immediately as the parent of an autistic child. Keiko doesn't get why people care so much about fitting the mold; she doesn't actually understand what the mold exactly is or why it matters at all. She enjoys her job because it's the same routine every day, instructions are clear, and everything in the store has its place. There is a method for everything and the store is something that can be learned and repeated without unspoken, complicated social rules. She mimics the mannerisms of others, learning how to "act" in certain ways as socially appropriate through this mimicry; it is clearly not intuition. I appreciated the perspective of an autistic adult. I don't think I've ever read a book from this perspective before.

  • sars

    aus BDA

    5/5

    11.10.2024

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    Soziale Normen oder eine gesunde Psyche?

    Sayaka Murata erzählt hier anhand des Lebens einer Konbini Mitarbeiterin das es manchmal wichtiger ist im gewohnten, für einen sicheren Umfeld zu bleiben in dem man durch und durch mit sich glücklich ist, anstatt sich zwangsweise irgendwelchen sozialen Normen zu fügen.

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

5

14

4

11

3

1

2

1

1

0

Bewertungen (27)

Unsere Meinungen

  • Zum Bewerterprofil von A. Heim

    A. Heim

    Thalia Dresden – Haus des Buches

    Buchhändler*in

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    5/5

    27.02.2026

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    This one is for the weird girl fiction lovers

    Sayaka Murata, in my eyes, is the queen of writing the weirdest stories ever. In this book we follow Keiko through her one and only love: her work. She works at a convenience store, despite it being seen as no accomplishment at her age and in Japan. Still, through every nagging by her friends and the social pressure, she keeps holding to her principles. A funny, weird, and short read and probably one of my all-time favorites.
  • Zum Bewerterprofil von M. Cengiz

    M. Cengiz

    Thalia Lübeck – Citti Park

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    5/5

    13.10.2025

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    Unique book with a fresh take on feminism and contemporary life

    With Keiko we find a protagonist who is freshly unique and unintentionally funny, while showing bravery that is inspiring. This is a funny, weird portrayal of society's expectations of people, especially of single women. It also shows how specific jobs are looked down on, as if not being challenging enough and its workers being unworthy. Very contradictory to the reality of jobs like this being essential, which is something that during the pandemic has been made very clear. This is a unique book with a fresh take on feminism, work culture and contemporary life with a very clear massage. Don‘t sacrifice yourself trying to please the world. Follow or forge the path you want. Only then will you find happiness.
  • Zum Bewerterprofil von Kim Zoe Engelhardt

    Kim Zoe Engelhardt

    Mayersche Aachen

    Buchhändler*in

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    5/5

    16.09.2025

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    A must read for the strange girls

    As an avid reader of Sayaka Murata's work ‘Convenience Store Woman’ was my first and still is my absolute favorite of her books. I have always struggled to enjoy the modern representation of neurodivergent protagonists, either because it was so overly comical that it was borderline offensive or because I simply didn’t find it to be relatable. ‘Convenience Store Woman’ is different. Keiko is 36, working at a convenience store, no children or partner, her life seems like the opposite of what Japanese society finds to be an appropriate path for a woman in their mid-thirties. Murata beautifully describes the experience of following dreams and having aspirations that the general society deems unworthy to dream of and unnecessary to care about, while also being put under pressure as a woman for not feeling the urge to create a family. You follow Keiko's struggle with her peers and her attempts to be left alone by them, leading to many unhappy moments but ultimately make her return to hinobo, her happy place. A must read for girls and women who feel ashamed of their unconventional dreams.
  • Zum Bewerterprofil von L. Hanisch

    L. Hanisch

    Thalia Bonn

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    5/5

    25.04.2023

    Buch (Taschenbuch)

    How to define „normal“?

    Keiko has never fit in until she finally finds her sole purpose and identity in being a convenience store worker. However, almost two decades later, Keiko still has not considered looking for another, more „prestigious“ job, and both family and friends start expressing discomfort with her refusing to leave her beloved store. Neither do they understand how she does not want to pursue any relationship with a man and prefers to stay a virgin at 36 years old. They want her to be „cured“. But is there anything wrong when being a store worker is all that Keiko ever needed in life? I had high expectations when I bought this book, and Murata has served all of them! It is a short read (sadly) and might be considered a novella, but provides you with a good portion of humour told from the perspective of a witty woman. Keiko is such a unique protagonist you do not get to read about all day. She has always struggled to fit in, but as an employee at a convenience store she is doing brilliant, and always works in accordance with the store‘s needs. With a manual at hand, she also knows how to handle every situation she might face at the store, which truly gives her a sense of control she has always lacked in life and still does off work. The book perfectly illustrates how you can be happy in doing what you do, but may be considered insufficient or abnormal by society if you fail to comply with its demands. It is doing that in a delightful way that makes you giggle here and there and – in my case, unable to put the book down. I really enjoyed reading „Convenience Store Woman“ and I cannot wait to read another book written by Murata!
  • Zum Bewerterprofil von Judith-Lea Bothmer

    Judith-Lea Bothmer

    Thalia Pforzheim

    Buchhändler*in

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    5/5

    27.12.2022

    eBook (ePUB)

    Taking a stand against 'normal'!

    At the age of thirty-six, Keiko Furukura has worked at the same convenience store for eighteen years and seen seven managers as well as a fleeting number of co-workers and part-time jobbers. In regular intervals, Keiko is socially pressured by her family and friends to opt for something bigger and better in life. For a more rewarding job, for a husband, for a bigger apartment, for children - in short for everything the average public considers normal and compliant. However, Keiko is NOT normal. Since early childhood, Keiko is unable to read facial expressions and verbal cues correctly and finds herself in many situations in which her behaviour is considered inappropriate. As a result, Keiko has established a safe space for herself with clear-cut boundaries, tasks and living-conditions that make her feel happy and secure. Blind to her contentment and happiness, her peers refuse to accept Keiko the way she is and try to fix her, thus giving her the feeling of an outcast. In this way, it is not a coincidence that Keiko's predicament remains undiagnosed, thereby underlining all the more Murata's criticism of insufficient mental health awareness and the resulting prejudices the affected individuals have to deal with. Murata is a strong contemporary voice and her novel a remarkable case study of living with Asperger's syndrome.

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Bewertungen (11)

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  • Produktbild: Convenience Store Woman
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