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Kakigori summer / Emily Itami.

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: English, Japanese Original language: English Publisher: New York ; Boston : Mariner Books, [2025]Edition: First US editionDescription: 328 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780063432161
  • 0063432161
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 823/.92 23/eng/20250527
LOC classification:
  • PR6109.T36 K35 2025
Summary: When music idol Ai is embroiled in scandal, her sisters, ambitious Rei and single mother Kiki, pause their lives and spend the summer with Ai in their childhood home on the Japanese coast so they can rescue their baby sister.
List(s) this item appears in: New Adult Fiction Fiction notes: Click to open in new window
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Phillipsburg Free Public Library Adult Fiction New Books FIC ITAMI Available 36748002617803
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A wry and tender novel from the author of Fault Lines about three very different sisters reunited in adulthood for one short summer, for readers of Hello Beautiful and Blue Sisters.

"Kakigori Summer is a novel about belonging... I loved retreating into its cocoon of sibling humor as the sisters briefly stepped back to discover their place in it." -- Florence Knapp, author of The Names

Rei, Kiki, and Ai are three sisters divided by distance and circumstance. Ambitious Rei works in finance in London; Kiki is the single mother of a young son, working in a retirement home in Tokyo; and Ai, the youngest, is a peripatetic Japanese music idol. Having lost both parents, one way or another, the sisters rely on each other as family, far-flung as they are.

When Ai is embroiled in a scandal, Rei and Kiki pause their own lives to rescue their baby sister. Over the course of a summer spent in their childhood home on the Japanese coast, the sisters will reunite with their sharp-edged grandmother, care for Kiki's irrepressible son, and silently worry about Ai, all while carefully not talking about the circumstances of their mother's death fifteen years before. But silence between sisters can only last for so long...

A transporting and redemptive novel, Kakigori Summer is a hopeful meditation on love and loss, sisterhood and family, and a profound exploration of the stories we tell ourselves about our past that enable us to move forward into the future.

Title appears in Japanese on title page as Kakigori no Natsu.

When music idol Ai is embroiled in scandal, her sisters, ambitious Rei and single mother Kiki, pause their lives and spend the summer with Ai in their childhood home on the Japanese coast so they can rescue their baby sister.

In English, contains some text in Japanese.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Itami (Fault Lines) serves up an inviting and wistful tale of three sisters who reunite during a crisis. Ai Takanawa, a 20-something Japanese pop star and the youngest of the sisters, winds up in a scandal when she's photographed being kissed by the married president of her record label. Her oldest sister, Rei, an investment banker in London, has just engaged in her own bit of reckless behavior, hooking up with her ex-boyfriend Sath at a wedding. She flies to Tokyo to meet middle sister Kiki, a single mother and health-care worker, and the pair hatch a plan to rescue Ai from the spotlight. They spirit her against her will to their secluded hometown of Ikimura, where they settle back into their childhood home with their ornery great-grandmother. While Ikimura provides the sisters with a haven from the paparazzi, the village also triggers troubling remembrances of their mother, who drowned herself when they were young. As they spend the summer eating matcha-flavored kakigori shaved ice and visiting the beach they played on as children, they attempt to find a way forward through their difficult adulthoods. Itami strikes just the right chord, showing how the sisters indulge their nostalgia for happier times even as they attempt to reckon with their painful memories. Readers are in for a treat. (June)

Booklist Review

When rising J-pop idol Ai gets caught with a married music executive, the resulting tabloid scandals shatters her image, and she becomes a national disgrace. The fallout draws in her two older sisters. Rei, a tightly controlled corporate professional living in London, debates whether to return to Tokyo to help, while Kiki tries to hold the family together with humor and resilience despite juggling her job, motherhood, and her own emotional load. Meanwhile, Ai retreats into herself, overwhelmed by the collapse of her carefully curated idol image and her own sense of self-worth. Told from alternating perspectives, the story unpacks each sister's private struggles as they reunite at their childhood home for the summer. Itami's (Fault Lines, 2021) voice is sharp, funny, and deeply empathetic, weaving together wit and poignancy in a character-driven narrative that feels fresh, heartfelt, and painfully real. She deftly explores celebrity culture in Japan, the emotional toll of perfectionism, and the jagged, enduring bond between sisters who couldn't be more different but are bound by shared loss and love.
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