“I was always asleep. Even when I was awake, I was asleep.”
Night and Night’s Travelers
The first story follows Shibami, a young woman grieving the death of her boyfriend, Haru. She struggles with insomnia and begins seeing Haru’s ghost in her dreams. Meanwhile, she befriends a woman named Fumi, who also lost someone. Their shared sorrow creates a bond, but Shibami remains trapped between wakefulness and dreams, unable to fully let go of Haru.
Love Songs
The second story centers on Fumi, a woman who falls into a deep sleep after her lover, a married man, leaves her. She drifts between reality and dreams, haunted by memories. A mysterious woman named Shiori appears in her dreams, offering cryptic comfort. Fumi’s sleep becomes a refuge, blurring the line between escape and surrender.
Asleep
The final story follows Terako, a woman who sleeps excessively after her best friend’s suicide. She becomes entangled with a man whose wife is in a coma, forming a strange, dreamlike relationship. Their shared loneliness binds them, but Terako’s sleep feels like both a curse and a sanctuary, leaving her suspended between life and death.
Key Ideas
- Grief and loss as transformative forces
- The thin boundary between dreams and reality
- Isolation and emotional numbness
- Sleep as both escape and imprisonment
- Female resilience in the face of sorrow
Who should read this book?
- Readers who enjoy introspective, melancholic narratives
- Fans of Japanese literature with dreamlike prose
- Those exploring themes of grief and emotional detachment
- People drawn to quiet, atmospheric storytelling