Dragon Palace

Hiromi Kawakami author Ted Goossen translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Stone Bridge Press

Published:2nd Nov '23

£13.99

Available for immediate dispatch.

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Dragon Palace cover

  • Co-op available
  • National print campaign – Galleys/e-galleys sent to The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, The Japan Times, Kyoto Journal, Japan Forward, Nippon, Nikkei Asian Review, LA Times, and other national and fiction and Japan-interest media and reviewer
  • Virtual book talks with Japan Societies in USA.
  • Podcast interviews with book-related podcasts such as Books on Asia, Asian Review of Books.
  • Excerpts in Lithub, The New Yorker, The New York Times. (Previous books under MONKEY imprint have  placed excerpts in The New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/07/10/the-kitchen-god-fiction-hiromi-kawakami)
  • Promotion through the author's/translator's website and social media channels:
  • Special outreach for reviews and interviews with the author and translator to English-language Japanese media including NHK, The Japan Times, The Asahi Shimbun, Japan Today and more.


    Included in The New Yorker's Best Books of 2023

    Stories from a Japanese master of transformative fiction, where reality, myth, and human foibles meet shifting dimensions of gender, biology, and destiny.

    From the bestselling author of Strange Weather in Tokyo comes this otherworldly collection of eight stories, each a masterpiece of transformation, infused with humor, sex, and the universal search for love and beauty—in a world where the laws of time and space, and even species boundaries, don’t apply. Meet a shape-shifting con man, a goddess who uses sex to control her followers, an elderly man possessed by a fox spirit, a woman who falls in love with her 400-year-old ancestor, a kitchen god with three faces in a weasel-infested apartment block, moles who provide underground sanctuary for humans who have lost the will to live, a man nurtured through life by his seven extraordinary sisters, and a woman who is handed from husband to husband until she is finally able to return to the sea.

    "Spirits, animals, and people cohabit the universe of these eight stories, which capture with quirky insight and deadpan humor the strangeness of human relationships."

    The New Yorker

    "Hiromi Kawakami returns to a world of fluid transfiguration with supernatural strangeness and knowing humor."

    Thu-Huong Ha, The Japan Times

    “Unsettling and provocative… prominent Japanese writer Kawakami and lauded Canadian professor-translator Goossen reprise their successful collaboration for People from My Neighborhood with another addictively strange collection.”

    Terry Hong, Booklist

    “An absurdist take on the human psyche.” 

    Walter Sim, The Straits Times

    "Dragon Palace features eight surreal, emotionally affecting stories set in a world where the mystical and mundane rub elbows."

    Jaclyn Fulwood, Shelf Awareness

    "A short story collection tied together by an atmosphere of legends and metamorphosis."

    Richard Medhurst, Nippon.com

    "Dragon Palace showcases Kawakami’s knack for blending folklore and surrealism into modern day social politics and life experience."

    Books and Bao

    "Unique and attention-grabbing, Dragon Palace is a collection of open-ended fantasy tales about thwarted love and lost opportunities."

     —Eileen Gonzalez, Foreword Reviews

    "A surreal and imaginative collection of stories that blur the line between human and nonhuman and explore the relationships we form with others and with ourselves throughout our lives."

    Allison Mcclung, World Literature Today

    “A vivid, disturbing collection”

    M.A.Orthofer, The Complete Review

    "Exceedingly unique... Kawakami melds the mundane and banal with the surreal and fantastic, to good effect."

    Cameron Bassindale, The Japan Society Review

    “A fascinating collection of oddities in which some stories are humorous and accessible while others are more poetic and surreal.”

    Contemporary Japanese Literature

    "The stories in Dragon Palace use the absurd to shine a light on the disaffected parts of ourselves, our feelings of isolation and estrangement in a world where kindness and love seem in short supply."

    —Ian Mond, Locus Magazine

    "Kawakami's stories seduce... offering tales of individuals’ interactions with shapeshifting animals, five hundred-year-old men, magical beings, and mythical Japanese deities."

    —JP Cavender, Necessary Fiction

    ISBN: 9781737625353

    Dimensions: unknown

    Weight: unknown

    160 pages