Audiobook Review
Hunchback (2025)
by Saou Ichikawa
Translation by Polly Barton
It's been a slow year for literary fiction- compared to last year- by this point in 2024 I'd read 14 books published in the current year. This year the comparable number of books is four, and none of them were particularly memorable. Thus, Hunchback arrived as a minor revelation, a book which boldly does what fiction ought to do- generate empathy and understanding for a point of view which has been previously neglected or ignored. Ichikawa, who suffers from congenital myopathy, has written a book which redefine the way most readers think about the severely disabled. It's not a rah-rah look at me I'm amazing situation, nor is it inordinately bleak. Ichikawa's protagonist and narrator is wry, self-aware and very horny- a situation which is exacerbated by her side hustle of writing porn for the internet.
The plot is slight, as one would imagine in a book written from the POV of a person who is basically stuck in her room all day. Basically, the narrator wants to have sex and then there are consequences. I think it's likely to be a memorable read for most readers. The Audiobook was great.
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