The New Yorker
f very y, and psyc tendency to let sentiment take over from time to time, and tic s;
takatsuki of t tic s use . todays sukiyaki ic s;
Junpei publisories before urned ty: quot;; and quot;Grapes.quot; quot;; sold ten t;Grapesquot; t bad figures for s-story collections, according to or. t none gave e support. Most of Junpeis stories young people in situations of unrequited love. yle s ration ive style and grittier plots. ter all. Junpeis editor urged o try a novel. If e anyt s stories, keep dealing erial over and over again. riting a novel could open up ical matter, too, novels attracted far more attention tories. riting only s stories was a o make a living.
But Junpei ory er. everyto urn out a first draft in trated effort. After four more days of polis to Sayoko and or to read. Basically, ttle in t first tered in tory came togety ed to total concentration of effort over a fe only exion ing a novel. ain ration for mont a time? t kind of pacing eluded him.
Given ere bacyle, Junpei did not need muc op accepting to feed. ype, and for ending tionsimes, maybe once a mont an odd time in t o panic. Im not going any, but Im never going to go anyo e, or drink until ay awake.
takatsuki ed—reporting for a top ney o brag about, but t interviee scer graduation, takatsuki a te from dooimes a as if table ogether.
takatsuki enjoyed t to ty desk, o t. quot;I can see a corpse no feel a t; rains, ced cadavers of droims, guns victims tered.