The world of nighttime entertainment in Japan has long held a certain seedy fascination for those in and outside of the country. It is not often, however, that the perspectives of women working as hostesses at ²õ¨­±è³Ü°ù²¹²Ô»å´Ç (¡°soaplands,¡± bathhouses that offer sexual services) are represented with thoughtful candor and nuance.

In Suzumi Suzuki¡¯s ¡°Gifted,¡± translated by Allison Markin Powell, each alcohol-soaked locale in the novella simply provides the setting or background for the main character¡¯s life, rather than serving as a central element to the plot, and Suzuki authentically portrays the strict layers of etiquette in place at such establishments. There¡¯s no societal agenda or coming of age for our unnamed narrator. Instead, ¡°Gifted¡± lyrically captures a moment in time, unwrapping the bittersweet denouement in a fraught relationship between a mother and daughter.

Gifted, by Suzumi Suzuki. Translated by Allison Markin Powell. 108 pages, TRANSIT BOOKS, Fiction.