Of all the textbooks I've ever been required to read for school, I must say, Banana Yoshimoto's novella "Kitchen", which I had to read for English class is my all-time favorite. To be honest it's the only one I've re-read more than twice out of my own will and I feel like I do get something new out of the book every time I read it. I'm not exaggerating; the first time I read the book, I found it somewhat confusing and not all that interesting as the plot moved slowly and lacked drama, but after reading it for the second and third times I learned to appreciate the writing style and somehow, the characters just... snuck into my heart and stayed there. Thanks to "Kitchen"I now define a good book by whether or not it can make me cry (internally and/or externally, from emotional upheaval- I beg to differ, when I read the notorious Harry Potter Fanfiction "My Immortal" I was literally crying because my retinas were bleeding from how bad it was) in less than two hundred pages. That's one of the things I find so interesting, you could say, about the book. The first short story in the book, "Kitchen" was only a hundred and five pages long while the second, "Moonlight Shadows" was even shorter at forty five. Yet, I still feel like sobbing hysterically- not just because both stories are heavily centered around death. There is something subtle and beautiful yet heavily depressing in the writing, for which I envy the author Yoshimoto, although my copy of the book is an English-translated version. One day, when I have the sufficient skill in Japanese language, I swear I will buy the original book and read it. (I'm very sad that I can't seem to be able to find any of Yoshimoto's other works in bookstores... ;-;)
ALRIGHT BRO THAT'S ENOUGH SPAM FOR ONE DAY PEOPLE DON'T WANNA HEAR THIS SORTA WEIRD STUFF *slaps myself in the face*
#TrainThurnaxOut