American Fuji

Backer, Sara. American Fuji. G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 2001.

Reason read: there is a interesting day in Japan called “Coming of Age” and it is celebrated in January as a national holiday. It is always the second Monday in January.

At first glance, American Fuji seems like a satire. The title of the book is tongue-in-cheek and the company Gaby Stanton works for is ridiculous. Gone with the Wind promises fantasy funeral services; even selling people travel to the moon to the tune of “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star” or the obvious “Fly Me to the Moon” for a loved one’s remains. A grieving American father came to Shizuoka, Japan, under the guise of promoting a self-help book, but really looking for answers as to why his teenage son was shipped home in a casket. Cody Thorn was an exchange student and only twenty years old. Japanese culture stonewalls his father, Alex Thorn, at every turn because he didn’t research his options before arriving. All he knew was that Gone With the Wind was responsible for sending his son’s body home so logically, he starts there. Interestingly enough, Gaby Stanton had three connections to Alex’s deceased son. She had been a professor at the University where Cody had been studying (until she was mystifyingly fired), she now works at the same funeral home that had unceremoniously shipped Cody’s body home after a motorcycle accident took his life, and her only Gone With the Wind client is the recipient of Cody’s transplanted heart. Here are some other coincidences that startled me. Alex Thorn travels to the university by himself and manages to meet the very professor who took Gaby’s job. He also meets Gaby’s British friend completely by accident as well.
Together, Gaby and Alex pair up to solve their individually mysteries. Throw in a chronic illness, corruption, the Japanese mafia, and the summer heat and cultural prejudices and there you have American Fuji. Despite being a busy book with too many coincidences, I enjoyed American Fuji.

Book trivia: American Fuji is Sara Backer’s first novel.

Author fact: according to the back flap of American Fuji, Sara Backer is a poet, essayist, and short fiction writer.

Because Gaby’s boss only speaks in Beatles lyrics, there were a few to mention. Here’s the whole playlist: Bach, Beatles, Beethoven, Brahms Fourth Symphony, “Camptown Races”, Chopin, Debussy, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra’s “Fly Me to the Moon” and “My Way”, “Swan Lake”, “Hey Jude”, “I am the Walrus”, “Jingle Bells”, Karen Carpenter’s “Close to You”, Mick Jagger, Paul McCartney, “Revolution”, Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet, “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star”, “Whistle While You Work”, and “Yesterday”.

BookLust Twist: from Book Lust To Go in the chapter called “Japanese Journeys” (p 116).