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Credits

Writer: Alan Spence; Genres: Action/Adventure, Fiction; Publisher: Canongate

In 1858, a young clerk named Thomas Glover set sail from his native Scotland for Japan; the enterprising — and unscrupulous — gaijin amassed a fortune in tea and guns, introduced the railway and telegraph, and helped usher in a reformist emperor. Along the way, he fathered an illegitimate son by a courtesan — which purportedly inspired Puccini's opera Madame Butterfly. The Pure Land, Alan Spence's fictive retelling, vividly evokes feudal Japan as a ''foetid backwater'' of warring clans, marauding samurai, and fleshpits catering to foreign appetites. Oddly, as the country violently erupts into modernity, the narrative sags beneath awkwardly shoehorned historical detail. Yet when the focus shifts to the protagonists' fates, the climax is as sharp and satisfying as a classic haiku. B


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