Love & Relationships
Friendship
Self-Discovery
Past Trauma
Personal Growth
Star-Crossed Lovers
Power of Friendship
Forbidden Love
Coming of Age
Fish Out of Water
Friends to Lovers
Opposites Attract
Power of Music
Cultural Clash
Importance of Communication
Mental Health
Identity
University Life
Love
Lgbtq+ Themes
About this ebook
A powerful novel about the LGBTQ rights movement and gay love in Japan and Taiwan, from the most important queer voice of East Asia's millennial generation.
Cho Norie, twenty-seven and originally from Taiwan, is working an office job in Tokyo. While her colleagues worry about the economy, life-insurance policies, marriage, and children, she is forced to keep her unconventional life hidden—including her sexuality and the violent attack that prompted her move to Japan. There is also her unusual fascination with death: she knows from personal experience how devastating death can be, but for her it is also creative fuel. Solo Dance depicts the painful coming of age of a gay person in Taiwan and corporate Japan. This striking debut is an intimate and powerful account of a search for hope after trauma.
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Book preview
Solo Dance - Li Kotomi
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An important queer voice from East Asia’s millennial generation
Chō Norie, twenty-seven and originally from Taiwan, is working an office job in Tokyo. While her colleagues worry about the economy, life-insurance policies, marriage, and children, she is forced to keep her unconventional life hidden—including her sexuality and the violent attack that prompted her move to Japan. There is also her unusual fascination with death: she knows from personal experience how devastating death can be, but for her it is also creative fuel. Solo Dance depicts the painful coming of age of a gay person in Taiwan and corporate Japan. This striking debut is an intimate and powerful account of a search for hope after trauma.
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Praise for Li Kotomi
With her powerful voice, Kotomi blows a fresh, new breeze into the often introverted world of contemporary Japanese literature.
Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
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Praise for Solo Dance
This book is carried by the literary traditions that the author has taken into her very being, along with an energy fostered by the breaking of cultural and linguistic barriers.
KAN NOZAKI
In an era where everyone is perhaps too connected, we are forced to consider the importance of the solitude, not loneliness, that is depicted in this novel.
ALISA IWAKAWA, Gunzo
Her knowledge of Taiwanese, Chinese, and Japanese literature, as well as the inevitability of her becoming a writer is evident in her work, and I look forward to her future career.
MASAAKI TAKEDA, Shunkan Shincho
A striking debut from a young Taiwanese author, which follows the struggles and loneliness of a young woman, from her secret high school love, to the incident that drastically changes the course of her life, and her eventual journey and escape to Japan.
Kodansha, Japanese publisher
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LI KOTOMI is a bilingual Japanese-Chinese writer, translator, and interpreter. She was born in Taiwan in 1989 and moved to Japan in 2013. In 2017, she won the 60th Gunzō New Writers’ Prize for Excellence for her first novel, Solo Dance, written in Japanese, her second language. Since then she has been nominated for numerous prizes in Japan, and in 2021 she received the Minister of Education Award for Fine Arts, a prize for new writers. Her range of activities spans multiple countries, regions, and languages, and her translation expertise ranges from general business to literary arts, tourism, manga, games, and contracts.
ARTHUR REIJI MORRIS is a translator of Japanese literature, manga, and video games. Born in London, he graduated from the University of Leeds in 2015, before moving to Tokyo. When he’s not translating, Arthur enjoys writing music and practicing Japanese calligraphy. He returned to the UK in 2019, and is now based in London.
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AUTHOR
"For me, all the pain that Chō experiences is very real. That isn’t to say her experiences are based on my own, but I fully understand her suffering, and the only way for me to process and liberate it was by writing this novel. Since Solo Dance, I have published other books, a number of which have gone on to be nominated for and win awards. But no matter how highly rated these books may be, Solo Dance, my first novel, will always remain a precious and irreplaceable book to me."
TRANSLATOR
Most books are narrated in the first-person, or in the third-person with a named protagonist, but this is the first work I’ve translated where the main character is referred to only as ‘she’ throughout almost all of the narrative. Our main character has many names, many faces, yet ‘she’ still remains the same person, no matter her struggles. It was a challenge to translate this aspect smoothly into English, a language which is ever so reliant on pronouns, but I hope that it will encourage the reader to think about our names and their relationship with our identities.
PUBLISHER
Li Kotomi is an extremely talented young author who straddles two languages and cultures. There is much to love about her powerful debut: the insight she offers into youth culture in both Japan and Taiwan, a look at the gay rights movement in these countries, as well as the protagonist’s insatiable passion for books and melancholic obsession with death. I am happy and proud to introduce this unique new voice to an English-language audience.
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Li Kotomi
SOLO DANCE
Translated from the Japanese
by Arthur Reiji Morris
WORLD EDITIONS
New York, London, Amsterdam
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Published in the USA in 2022 by World Editions LLC, New York
Published in the UK in 2022 by World Editions Ltd., London
World Editions
New York / London / Amsterdam
Copyright © Li Kotomi, 2018
English translation copyright © Arthur Reiji Morris, 2022
Cover image © Peter ter Mors
Author portrait © Nippon.com
This book is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data is available
ISBN Trade paperback 978-1-64286-114-3
ISBN E-book 978-1-64286-116-7
English language translation rights arranged with the author through New River Literary Ltd.
Arthur Reiji Morris hereby asserts their moral right to be identified as the translator of this work in accordance with the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988
First published as 独り舞 in Japan in 2020 by Kōdansha Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Twitter: @WorldEdBooks
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www.worldeditions.org
Book Club Discussion Guides are available on our website.
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CHAPTER 1
Death.
Dying.
She looked through the office window down at the glimmering neon cityscape below as she repeated these words, letting them roll over her tongue.
The words felt good on her lips, their sound gentler than the whispering breeze, softer than any carpet in her dreams.
She didn’t have a strong inclination towards death, but she had no attachment to living either. While she still had breath in her lungs, she would do her best in life, yet should it ever reach that point where it was no longer bearable, she would choose death without hesitation.
It wasn’t clear to her whether this particular way of thinking was strange or not. Maybe everyone had the exact same thoughts, but just didn’t voice them.
Take the masses of ant-sized people in the city below. How many of them were heading now to their deaths? One heading to fling themselves from a nearby skyscraper, another on their way to leap in front of a passing train. Or one about to get caught in a horrific traffic accident on the way to a fancy restaurant to celebrate their wedding anniversary. In her opinion, life itself amounted to nothing more than pure chance.
Why can’t the human race just hurry up and wipe itself out?
She remembered those words she had let slip only yesterday. When speaking Japanese, she wasn’t always able to control her mouth, and was prone to accidentally voicing her true thoughts.
It was during lunch in the company cafeteria, where Okabe was happily conversing and debating with her and her fellow colleagues. Okabe, two years her senior and a Tokyo University graduate, was tall and slender, with glasses that made his eyes pop like a lemur’s; he was intelligent and was well regarded in their department for his mathematical brain. The conversation had found its way to the subject of money. Apparently, Japan had accrued a national debt that was twice the country’s GDP, and with the yen weakening towards an unprecedented low, he was suggesting that it was worth judging investments in dollar terms. Her coworkers were listening intently, but she let Okabe’s words wash over her. She was twenty-seven and this real-world conversation shouldn’t feel so remote, but she couldn’t force herself to get interested. There was an insurmountable wall that prevented her from fully engaging with it. All this talk of a decade from now, two decades from now, seemed like the distant future—hundreds if not thousands of years away. A world in which her existence wouldn’t make any difference. That was the true representation of her feelings.
Okabe went on at an unfalteringly quick pace. A nation would sacrifice its own inhabitants in order to prevent the possibility of ruination. Just think of the war,
he said, to pay its debts, the government drained the people of all their financial worth. Although Japan is poor, there are still many who are rich.
It was that moment the words slipped out from her lips.
Why can’t the human race just hurry up and wipe itself out?
She realized her mistake too late. But Okabe had simply glanced at her before saying, Good question.
Not a moment later, the clock announced the end of their lunch break, and she breathed a sigh of relief.
It was a childish and thoughtless remark, but at the same time it was also what she felt. Death leads all of life to an equal end, heals all wounds without bias. It would be a lie to say a small part of her didn’t agree with that.
Maybe her way of thinking was in the minority. After all, it was true that she couldn’t speak easily of the future the way her colleagues did.
Two years ago, during her induction period, there was a seminar on life planning.
It was a discussion on what kind of life you wanted to lead and what steps you needed to take to get there. The talk eventually moved on to life-threatening risks—accidents, disease—and, with intimidating overtones, suggested risk-management protocols; or, in other words, insurance.
Insurance. If death
was the word with the most appealing ring to it, then surely insurance
was the opposite—a concept that was nothing more than the commodification of humanity’s innate fear of future uncertainty. And not only this, but its profits rested on the exclusion of those who would benefit from it the most. This inequality never failed to make her stomach turn.
But it seemed like she was the only one who thought this way. Yuka, sitting next to her, cheerfully asked, Hey, so which plan are you going for?
With aspirations to get married, have two children, and to have purchased her own property before the age of thirty, Yuka earnestly read over the documents they were given about assets under management. Yuka’s smile was like a cheerful sunflower, petals in full bloom. Unlike Yuka, to her, the future seemed so distant and fragile, like a bubble, ready to pop at any second. Although a bubble may refract the light in a glorious rainbow, defying gravity as it drifts towards the sky, as soon as it bursts, it vanishes without a trace.
I’m not going to sign up to any of it,
she said simply.
Really? Are you sure?
Yuka said. The disbelief in Yuka’s voice was unmistakeable, but she didn’t push the matter any further.
In truth, she wouldn’t have been able to join a company-sponsored insurance plan even if she wanted to. To make up for its cheap price, it had an incredibly high barrier to entry. With her history of mental health–related hospitalization and antidepressant prescriptions, she wasn’t eligible. In order to avoid any unwanted questions, she didn’t dare mention that, though.
Yuka turned instead to her left. How about you, Erika? Which plan are you going to choose?
Erika smiled awkwardly and replied, None, I think. I’m not even sure I can after what happened with my leg. I’ll have to talk to my doctor first …
Oh, right. Of course, sorry,
Yuka said, awkwardly.
Erika had had an accident during her first year of university which had permanently injured her leg. She knew that she shouldn’t give any unwanted sympathy to Erika, but she couldn’t help feeling a pang not only of pain but also of pity as she watched her coworker dragging her leg while she walked. After all, she felt a sort of kinship with her. And despite the guilt she felt for feeling this way, she and Erika had an easy friendship.
Erika was an awkward sort and not good at speaking in front of a crowd. The day they were placed in the same department, all new employees had to say a little something about themselves. Erika had stuttered and stammered until she managed to mutter a small It’s a pleasure to work with you
before giving up.
Her own introduction, which happened right afterwards, couldn’t have been more different.
Hello everyone, my name is Chō Norie. I’m from Taiwan, and sorry to ruin your stereotypes but I hate bubble tea and pineapple cake,
she’d said, finishing off her bold self-introduction by trying to get a few laughs. Of course, she had refrained from talking about her being a lesbian, about the incident, about her mental illness, about how she had come to Japan in order to escape from Taiwan, about how Norie was a name she’d made up to sound more Japanese.
It was