Lydia Minatoya

The Strangeness of Beauty

"Minatoya offers a tenderly packaged gift. Unwrapping it is a pleasure."—Austin Chronicle

A quietly daring exploration of art, family, culture, and conscience, as three generations of women, American and Japanese, face a strained reunion in pre-World War II Japan. Etsuko and her six-year-old motherless niece return from jazz-age Seattle to the ancient Japanese household of Etsuko’s mysterious samurai mother. With Japanese militarism mounting, the women must learn to make peace in an absorbing tale where mothers are childless, warriors are pacifists, and beauty is found in the common and the small.

"How sad it was to finish Lydia Minatoya’s first novel. She allowed me to live inside the sensibilities of three generations of achingly engaging Japanese women and I did not want to let them go. The Strangeness of Beauty is a strange and beautiful work of art."—Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize-winning author

Strangeness of Beauty book jacket

reading group guide


Lydia Minatoya won the Pacific Northwest Booksellers’ Award and notable-book citations from the American Library Association and the New York Public Library for her memoir, Talking to High Monks in the Snow. She lives in Seattle, Washington.


January 2001 / Paperback / ISBN 0-393-32140-1 / 384 pages / 6" x 8" / Fiction
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