<p>"An eerie, brushstroked evocation . . . A strikingly vivid, even visceral writer, Lloyd Parry sweeps away distractions . . . to offer tightly focused and consuming human stories . . . Lloyd Parry is uncommonly sensitive to all such spirits, and in the tsunami he has found a horrifying metaphor for those subliminal forces that swirl underneath the manicured surfaces of Japan . . . The ghosts that hover just above his charged and elemental pages are a reminder of how much this land of order remains ruled by things that can't be seen." --Pico Iyer, <i>The New York Times Book Review</i></p><p>"A lively and nuanced narrative by the British journalist Richard Lloyd Parry, the longtime and widely respected correspondent in Tokyo for the London <i>Times</i>. Though in part he presents vivid accounts of what was a very complex event, with this book he wisely stands back . . . to consider the essence of the story . . . Heartbreaking." --Simon Winchester, <i>The New York Review of Books</i></p><p>"Powerful . . . Lloyd Parry's account is truly haunting, and remains etched in the brain and heart long after the book is over." --Lisa Levy, <i>New Republic</i></p><p>"Richard Lloyd Parry wrote <i>People Who Eat Darkness</i>, easily one of the best works of true crime in the past decade . . . [<i>Ghosts of the Tsunami</i> is] a stunning portrait of devastation and its aftermath." -Kevin Nguyen, <i>GQ</i></p><p>"A wrenching chronicle of a disaster that, six years later, still seems incomprehensible . . . Any writer could compile a laundry list of the horrors that come in the wake of a disaster; Lloyd Parry's book is not that . . . Lloyd Parry writes about the survivors with sensitivity and a rare kind of empathy; he resists the urge to distance himself from the pain in an attempt at emotional self-preservation." -Michael Schaub, <i>NPR.org</i><br><i></i><br>"Remarkably written and reported . . . a spellbinding book that is well worth contemplating in an era marked by climate change and natural disaster." -Kathleen Rooney, <i>The Chicago Tribune</i></p><p>"Vivid, suspenseful . . . [Lloyd Parry] re-creates the tragic events in a cinematic style reminiscent of Truman Capote's <i>In Cold Blood</i> . . . There's a harrowing intimacy here, as he brings us into families senseless with grief, the desire for a justice that eludes them . . . Lloyd Parry's elegant, clear-eyed prose allows him to circle ever closer to the heart of Okawa's mystery . . . Part detective story, part cultural history, part dirge, <i>Ghosts of the Tsunami</i> probes the scars of loss and the persistence of courage in the face of unspeakable disaster." --Hamilton Cain, Minneapolis <i>Star Tribune</i><br><i></i><br><i></i>"[Lloyd Parry's] writing is always graceful and filled with compassion." --Adam Hochschild, <i>The American Scholar</i></p><p>"[The book's] testimonies are almost unbearably moving . . . In an understated way, <i>Ghosts of the Tsunami</i> is not only a vivid, heartfelt description of the disaster, but a subtle portrait of the Japanese nation." --Craig Brown, <i>The Mail on Sunday</i></p><p>"The stories that Lloyd Parry gives voice to are not only deeply personal but . . . accompanied with essential historical and cultural context that enable the reader to understand the roles of death, grief, and responsibility in Japanese culture--and why some survivors may always remain haunted." --Amanda Winterroth, <i>Booklist</i> (starred review)</p><p>"A brilliant, unflinching account . . . Singular and powerfully strange . . . It is hard to imagine a more insightful account of mass grief and its terrible processes. This book is a future classic of disaster journalism, up there with John Hersey's <i>Hiroshima</i>." --Rachel Cooke, <i>The Guardian</i></p><p>"Lloyd Parry combines an analytical dissection of the disaster in all its ramifying web of detail with a novelist's deft touch for characterization . . . Heartrending . . . it will remain as documentation to the inestimable power of nature and the pitiful frailty of our own." --Roger Pulvers, <i>The Japan Times</i> </p><p>"Pensive travels in the wake of one of the world's most devastating recent disasters, the Tohoku earthquake of 2011 . . . The author's narrative is appropriately haunted and haunting . . . A sobering and compelling narrative of calamity." -<i>Kirkus Reviews</i></p>
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