© Columbia University Press
Paper, 136 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-231-12613-7
$22.50
/ £13.00
March, 2003
Cloth, 136 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-231-12612-0
$73.50
/ £43.00
"This. . . novel by one of Japan's antiestablishment writers depicts the horrors of war during the final days of World War II. . . . The formal style evokes an epic quality that transcends this one small battle. . . .The book is superbly translated and introduced by Keene, a preeminent scholar and professor who has devoted his life to Japan." — Library Journal
"[This] 1998 novel about the defense of a small South Pacific island against American invasion—its Japanese author's first in English translation—displays a riveting economy and intensity . . . depicted in unflinchingly graphic detail . . . this excellent little tale [is] very much something of an Asian Red Badge of Courage." — Kirkus Reviews
"This is a novel that is intellectually engaging." — Persimmon
"The Breaking Jewel is heart-rending and tactfully moving. It is also remarkable that Oda (and Keene's translation) proved to be as powerful as a novella." — Historical Novels Review
"Oda, a prominent and controversial novelist known for his outspoken antiestablishment and antiwar sentiments, gradually and subtly develops a powerful indictment against World War II . . . The novel openly questions whethergyokusai (literallythe breaking jewel) is truly an act of patriotism or one of futile self-defeat." — Translation Review
"Oda compresses a lot of literary razzle-dazzle in these 116 pages . . . On one level we have the narrative of a good fighting story and on another level, a novel of race and class . . . [that] works on other levels of irony and myth. It is really an impressive job . . .The Breaking Jewel, indeed, fits our present times." — William Witherup, Pacific Reader
"With Donald Keene, our most important scholar of Japanese literature, we are guaranteed an accurate and graceful rendering into English as well as a significant novel, the first by Makoto Oda to be translated. Oda has provided a dramatic and compelling story about the Pacific War from the other side." — Sidney DeVere Brown, World Literature Today