Book details
Convenience Store Woman
by Sayaka Murata
2016
About the book
Keiko Furukura, a thirty-six-year-old woman in Tokyo, has worked at the Smile Mart convenience store for eighteen years. She struggles to process social cues and human emotions, finding her only sense of purpose through the store’s rigid manual. The corporate environment provides her with a predictable script for speech, movement, and identity. When her family and friends pressure her to seek a professional career or a husband, Keiko enters a cynical living arrangement with Shiraha, a bitter social outcast. Her attempt to mimic a traditional lifestyle threatens the equilibrium she maintains within the fluorescent aisles of the shop.
Readers interested in the tension between neurodiversity and societal expectations will find value in this narrative. It appeals to those who question the necessity of professional ambition and marriage as metrics for a successful life. The story provides a perspective on how rigid systems can offer sanctuary to people who feel alienated by informal social rules. A reader finishes the book with a clear view of the friction between individual comfort and the weight of cultural conformity in modern Japan.
Details
- Published
- 2016
- Language
- EN