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Nip the Buds, Shoot the Kids
- Narrated by: Edoardo Ballerini
- Length: 5 hrs and 37 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Nip the Buds, Shoot the Kids recounts the exploits of 15 teenage reformatory boys evacuated to a remote mountain village in wartime. The boys are treated as delinquent outcasts - feared and detested by the local peasants. When plague breaks out, their hosts abandon them and flee, blockading them inside the empty village. The boys' brief and doomed attempt to build autonomous lives of self-respect, love, and tribal valour fails in the face of death and the adult nightmare of war.
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Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Lucas Hicks
- 04-13-20
The most astounding book I have ever read.
Book Review:
Nip the Buds, Shoot the Kids - Kenzaburo Oe
Rating: 5 Stars
As I am still relatively new to the outside of European literature, not just that of the Japanese variety, my experience might be subject to a sparkling fascination similar to that of a child when they see something new for the first time. However, I will argue that this book is worthy of my outrageous rating (and has subsequently toppled my previous, more western choices for my favorite Novel. If you are curious, it was The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath, now dethroned.)
Why was it dethroned? A book that I have cherished for my entire adult life and most of my teenage years? (Being only 21, this isn't much to some, but is quite and extensive percentage of my own time on this earth.) This book has it all. It is full of grit, weird sexual undertones from both hetero and homosexual persuasions (Something I have noticed is somewhat prevalent in Japanese literature, for reasons I do not yet know.) and a very human plot.
You might think that is a strange way to summarize a plot as "human" but if you have ever read of the journals and tales of the Holocaust, such as Viktor Frankl, you might understand what I am getting at. The book follows 15 teenage reformatory boys in War-time Japan. Their journey leads them to a small village, where they are attempting to evacuate the now fire-bombed cities, courtesy of the American Forces in WW2. A plague breaks out and the villagers "leave the vermin" and block their path. In essence, trapping the 15 boys in the village now supposedly stricken with plague.
The story follows the protagonist, the leader of the group, and the antics that teenage boys might get up to in such a condensed issue. The boys all have relatively troubled pasts ranging from assault, to homosexual prostitution. The tale is full of Urine, Shit, Sex and just about how you might expect a bunch of loose-canon boys left to their own devises in despair might be. It reminds me of the english novel Lord of the Flies, but without the intensity of the metaphor of human fighting, but rather focusing more on the despair and societal development.
The boys often must bury their time in play, sex, embrace, hunting and essentially tearing down the norms of how boys should act, either sexually, societal or in any manner of conduct, effectively building a new society. (However, the boys weren't necessarily your normal pickings of the group before.)
If you might find yourself interested in blurred lines, pants-wetting grime (literally) and an interesting allegory of the human condition, this is for you.
Most shockingly, was how young the Author was, in the 50s, who wrote this at the age of 23, not far removed from some of the boys.
Highly recommended.
2 people found this helpful
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- Michael H.
- 12-30-21
Bleak and Beautiful
A devastating, bleak story written with such beauty that it’s all the more unbearable. I cannot comprehend how someone could write this level of sharp, sensuous, urgent sentences about anything, much less such horrible events. What emerges is the raw feel of boyhood and adolescence, disjointed perception, rich emotional life, and a keen sense of beauty and meaning in the mundane and exceptional, both of which merge into one another so one cannot even tell the difference. One of the best pieces of shot fiction I’ve ever encountered. The reader was perfect.
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- Marcos
- 02-09-18
beautifully read, wonderful translation.
very good narration.
the story is very linear, which makes it very easy to follow. I was listening to it during my one hour evening commute on scooter, proud to say I haven't misheard the narrative nor misride the bike.
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- Douglas
- 04-24-16
Well-Written
but lacking the pathos of a dominant central character. It is told from the first person, but we never really connect with this narrator, and thus, a lot of what happens, tragic as it is, remains distant and the reader is not as moved as he might be, were the narrator a bit more real as a person
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- Katie Sullivan
- 04-17-16
utterly depressing, but well-written
There are many books that are this depressing and morbid, but they typically have some message about the strength of the human spirit. This is not one of them. It is merely a wonderfully written story about the degradation of a group of children abandoned to a plague- ridden, deserted village. If you are of fragile emotional health or low constitution, I would advise against this novel.
1 person found this helpful
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- Mike M. Javanmard
- 01-01-14
Depressing
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
an excellent story but depressing
Who was your favorite character and why?
the child who took care of the dog
Which scene was your favorite?
when the main character refused to sell out.
Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
the killing of the dog
Any additional comments?
this book depressed me and made me lose faith in my fellow human beings.
2 people found this helpful
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- Lucy
- 07-14-15
Good, but. . .
Overall, this is a solid and well written book. Bleak, but solid.
The first chapter is problematic, and I'm not sure if it's a translation issue or an author issue, but words like "fagged out" feel jarring and wholly out of place. It's also hard to follow until the trip to the village. Give it a chapter or two.
Which raises my second issue with the book. There was a weird, creepy sexual undertone that was inconsistent but kept sneaking in every so often. I say weird and creepy because it didn't seem to fit in the larger context of the book. It couldn't decide what kind of tone it wanted to be. It alternated between homoerotic and homophobic with an healthy underlying dose of implied pedophilia thrown in for good measure.
Don't get me wrong all of those have an arguably valid place in literature, but they didn't fit here --at all. They did absolutely nothing to add to an otherwise solid story nor were they relevant to character development. Rather they felt like the author was either trying to personally work through something, or added in a bit of sexually socking ambiguity because -- you know-- literary fiction is more literary that way.
So 4 but with a huge star-sucking caveat.