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Farewell, My Orange
Farewell, My Orange | Iwaki Kei
10 posts | 7 read | 12 to read
Two immigrants, Salimah and Sayuri, navigate isolation, a new language, and loss on their way to a lifelong friendship. Far from her native country of Nigeria and now living as a single mother of two, Salimah works the night shift at a supermarket in small-town Australia. She is shy and barely speaks English, and signs up for an English class offered at the local university. At the groups first meeting, Salimah meets Sayuri, who has come to Australia from Japan with her husband, a resident research associate at the local college. Sayuri has put her own education on hold to take care of her infant daughter and is plagued by worries of financial instability and her precariousness. When tragedy intrudes into the lives of both women, they look to one another for comfort and sustenance as they forge a lasting relationship in a language that is not their own. Written with great warmth, Farewell, My Orange is a book about optimism in the face of adversity. In the stories of Salimah and Sayuri, readers will find a touching portrait of our need for others and the inevitability of change.
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blurb
Lindy
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Busy compiling stats and writing a blog post today instead of reading...

DivineDiana Quite amazing! 👏🏻📚👏🏻😮👏🏻 3y
PhyllisH Well done 👍🏻 👏🏻👏🏻🎉💐. I need to total my stats. 3y
Lindy @DivineDiana @PhyllisH Thanks! I‘ve been procrastinating on writing the blog post by doing housework. It takes a lot to motivate me to do housework. 🤪 3y
31 likes1 stack add3 comments
review
Lindy
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Pickpick

A slim, emotionally-affecting and hopeful novel told in the alternating viewpoints of two immigrants to Australia. Salimah is an African refugee with two young sons. Sayuri is the highly-educated wife of a Japanese academic. The two meet at an ESL class and become friends. #Translation by Meredith McKinney #WIT

31 likes2 stack adds
quote
Lindy
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Beneath a blue sky, learning to write under a great tree that sheltered her instead of a classroom roof. The first letters she had written with her finger in the sand. Letters that a man‘s feet had trampled. The land where she lived, her family, her friends—all taken from her. And after that, the simple prayer that she live another day to greet the sun again.

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Lindy
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While one lives in a foreign country, language‘s main function is as a means of self-protection and a weapon in one‘s fight with the world. You can‘t fight without a weapon. But perhaps it‘s human instinct that makes it even more imperative to somehow express oneself, convey meaning, connect with others.

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review
mreads
Farewell, My Orange | Iwanki Kei
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Pickpick

Strangely tough to review, story of two immigrant women in Australia (from Africa and Japan) who meet in English language class and their connection as outsiders and mothers. There's some really lovely writing here.
The tough part is the blurb for the book is misleading so that there can be a reveal towards the end of the book. But it feels like a cheap trick and almost ruined my reading experience.
So read the book but don't read the blurb!

Reggie This sounds good!! Stacked. 5y
ManyWordsLater Cheap trick indeed! 5y
53 likes3 stack adds2 comments
review
Sapphire
Farewell, My Orange | Iwanki Kei
Pickpick

You must read this beautiful book. 135 pages of humanity, of the story of women, of the immigrant experience, of how we hurt and heal each other, distilled in gorgeous prose into a simple story of two women and their friendship. A friendship so common, so true. The Europa edition is lovely. I highly recommend this book. While it's topic is timely, it's not preachy or political. It really is the ancient story of friendship that goads and inspires.

Texreader Lovely review 5y
16 likes2 stack adds1 comment
quote
Sapphire
Farewell, My Orange | Iwanki Kei

Beneath a blue sky, learning to write under a great tree that sheltered her instead of a classroom roof. The first letters she had written with her finger in the sand. ... And after that, the simple prayer that she live another day to greet the sun again

quote
Sapphire
Farewell, My Orange | Iwanki Kei

Every soap bubble held a sob, which echoed softly against the bathroom ceiling as it burst.

blurb
Sapphire
Farewell, My Orange | Iwanki Kei
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A new day, a new flight, a new airport waiting, new book.

Soubhiville This sounds good! 5y
Sapphire And about the right length for travel. I love Eurpoa editions and found this in their catalog. I hope it is as good as it sounds. 5y
15 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
8little_paws
Farewell, My Orange | Iwanki Kei
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Pickpick

It's a rainy night here in chicago so rather than try to go out this new year's, we stayed home where it's warm and dry. And I read this novella as my final book of 2018. Only 125 pages, but covers Australian immigration, racism, motherhood, second languages, the meaning of self sufficiency and work. And it matches my crochet project.

valeriegeary Lovely pic!! And lovely project! What is it going to be? 5y
8little_paws @valeriegeary baby blanket! No recipient, I just like having little gifts stockpiled for when necessary! I saw the pattern online, liked it and thought it was perfect mindless stitch for audio crafting or watching tv 5y
valeriegeary What a great idea, to have gifts stock piled! It's a really pretty pattern too! 5y
42 likes3 comments