Books by
Robert W. Norris
Autumn Shadows in August
ISBN: 1-4116-7297-6; Publisher: Lulu Press
Trade Paperback $11.68; PDF Download $3.00
Published February 2006
Available Soon Through Amazon.com and Other
Online Bookstores
Click here to listen to the podcast of
Autumn Shadows in August
Modeled roughly on Malcolm Lowry's Dark as the Grave Wherein My
Friend is Laid, this novel is part homage to Lowry and Hermann Hesse,
part mushroom retrospective, and part middle-aged love story. David Thompson
(the protagonist in Looking for the Summer) is an expatriate American teaching
at a Japanese university and suffering from hepatitis C. His wife Kaori
is recovering from cancer surgery. Feeling a strong sense of their own mortality,
confusion about the significance of what they have done with their lvies,
and a need to escape the constrictions of their life in Japan, the two set
out on a journey to Europe to retrace a path from David's adventurous youth
and locate a German benefactor from the past. What lies ahead--a trip through
the Magic Theater, a sudden death, an encounter with Lowry's ghost, and
a descent into the Capuchin Crypt in Rome--will change their lives irrevocably.
"Autumn Shadows in August is a journey in miles and of states
of mind. The reader travels through Europe with an American expatriate
who recapitulates his past in a transcendental and evocative fashion. Along
this mind-expanding sojourn, we also travel over the Khyber Pass from Afghanistan
and into India, where the protagaonist's life is transformed. Autumn Shadows
in August is an insightful and very enjoyable read. I'm glad I went along
on this personal journey."--David Echt, author of Messenger from the Summer
of Love
Click below if you want to read the first three chapters.
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Toraware
The New Edition
ISBN: 1-4116-7295-X; Publisher: Lulu Press
Trade Paperback $11.72; PDF Download $3.00
Published February 2006
Available Soon Through Amazon.com and Other
Online Bookstores
The Original Edition
ISBN: 4-924527-66-1; Publisher: Touka Shobo
Paperback; 324 pages
Published July 1998
The year is 1983. The place is the Kobe-Osaka area. A 33-year-old American
drifter and Vietnam War veteran has just arrived in Japan seeking one more
adventure and an escape from his past. A promiscuous, rebellious, 23-year-old
Japanese woman has just returned from a two-year homestay in a Canadian
mission, where she was sent by her parents to cure her suicidal behavior.
A snobbish, upper-class, 22-year-old Japanese woman who cannot distinguish
between fantasy and reality is about to graduate from university and enter
the frightening world of adulthood. Three people searching for a place to
belong. Three people dancing on a psychological highwire. Three people about
to become enmeshed in a relationship that will change each of their lives
forever. Toraware is a special novel that takes a penetrating look
at the obsessions, suspense, grief, misunderstandings, and joys of people
from very different cultures and backgrounds who are brought together by
fate to find the separate life paths they must follow.
"Crafted in excellent style and patiently honed....The Japanese characters
are wholly convincing....The ambivalence and spiritual guilt of Yoshiko,
one of the tragic heroines of Toraware, about an abortion she underwent
years ago, is perfectly captured....[Norris has] captured the unassuagable
melancholy at the deepest core of the Japanese soul [and] succeeded in
convincing us of the reality of [his] vision."--Kansai Time Out (read the
entire KTO review)
"A wonderful novel about that last love/lust journey some of us take before
we segue into middle age, acceptance and stability. It is a dangerous
journey, not for the weak of heart. Along the way are demons lying in
ambush, and false trails which can lead to madness, suicide and even murder.
Robert W. Norris has created characters we will grow to love, despite their
many flaws, characters who, we hope and pray, will make it through, characters
we will always remember. Be prepared to stay up nights as you follow their
progress. A number one read!"--Paul Clayton, author of Calling Crow
More Blurbs
Click below if you want to read the first four chapters.
Chapter 1 (24K)
Chapter 2 (15K)
Chapter 3 (14K)
Chapter 4 (18K)
Looking
for the Summer
The New Edition
ISBN: 1-4116-1130-6; Publisher: Lulu Press
Trade Paperback, $9.70; PDF Download, $2.00
Published January 2005
Also Available Through Amazon.com and Other Online Bookstores
The Second Edition
ISBN: 1 74053 030 6; Publisher: Jacobyte Books
Paperback (out of print)
Published August 2000
The Original Edition
ISBN: 4-924527-66-1; Publisher: Touka Shobo
Paperback (out of print)
Published Oct. 1996
David Thompson is a former Vietnam War conscientious objector in Paris
on a quest to find himself in the early days of 1977. When he befriends
an Iranian and an Afghan and is invited to return with them to their countries,
his quest slowly becomes a descent into his own private hell.
On the road from Europe to the East he encounters Kurdish bandits in the
eastern mountains of Turkey, becomes involved with an underground group
opposed to the Shah in Iran, escapes to Afghanistan, passes through Pakistan
during the uprising against the Bhutto regime, and suffers extreme sickness
on the streets of Delhi and Calcutta. Although continually searching for
the happiness and identity he could not find in the U.S., he cannot easily
shed his American past. Throughout the journey he is hounded by the demons
of memory, particularly that of his father, a World War II hero who disowned
David and died while David was still in prison. The journey itself becomes
a physical manifestation of his struggle to achieve reconciliation with
his own conscience.
This picaresque novel is interspersed with a multitude of characters whose
philosophical, political, and religious opinions influence David greatly
in his search. It is rich with the fascination of adventure in countries
not easily accessible anymore to Westerners, vibrant with its diversity
of characters, and graphic in its descriptions of poverty, death, and disease.
Looking for the Summer is a remarkable adventure story of a man about
to lose his youth and find his true self in ancient lands.
"A graceful autobiographical novel that breathes life into a perennial
genre: the spiritual bildungsroman. The theme of a questing expatriate
who renounces Western materialism in favor of an exotic pilgrimage to the
East will be familiar to anyone who has fallen under the spell of W. Somerset
Maugham's The Razor's Edge or Jack Kerouac's The Dharma Bums....
Although published prior to the events of 9/11, it is impossible to pick
up Norris's novel without a heightened interest in its vividly depicted
locales in a part of the world where our attentions are now so intensely
focused. Several fascinating chapters are devoted to [the protagonist's]
stay in Afghanistan. Written with a novelist's eye for characterization
and a reporter's skill for observation, Looking for hte Summer is
the kind of small press gem that is often overlooked but is well worth seeking
out. -- Bob Wake, CultureVulture.net (read the entire CultureVulture.net review)
"In the hands of any author, Looking for the Summer would probably
be a compelling read due to the inherent intrigue in the story's setting.
But Norris is a masterful writer and storyteller, and he uses his craft
to elevate this tale above mere 'compelling' or 'interesting' to the realm
of uplifting and insightful. He deftly paints a portrait of his locations
using a visual poetry that is neither self-conscious nor affected.... This
is a fascinating novel, told in spellbinding English. I can't recommend it
enough." -- Christine Hall, Alternative Approaches Magazine (read the entire
Alternative Approaches Magazine review)
"Looking for the Summer brings to light the turmoil going through
the mind of a conscientious objector to the Vietnam War...a powerfully
written novel....Highly important in its message about standing up for what
one believes and about the personal growth one experiences while on a soul-searching
journey as a result of taking such action...certain to have a profound
impact on the reader. It is a must-read, unforgettable novel." -- Jeanne
Allen, Knowbetter.com (read the entire Knowbetter.com review)
More Blurbs
Click below if you want to read the first four chapters.
Chapter
1 (8K)
Chapter 2(21K)
Chapter 3(11K)
Chapter 4 (12K)
The Many Roads to Japan: A Search for Identity
The New Edition
ISBN: 1-4116-1128-4; Publisher: Lulu Press
Paperback; 82 pages; $7.42
Published October 2004
Also Available From Amazon.com and Other Online Bookstores
Also Available as a Free Interactive E-Textbook for ESL Teachers and
Learners
See below for information on downloading
The Original Edition for Japanese Schools
ISBN: 4-271-11257-7; Publisher: Osaka Kyoiku Tosho
Email: daikyopb@osk4.3web.ne.jp
Paperback; 109 pages; 1,600 yen
Published April 1, 1997
Originally developed as a textbook for Japanese EFL university
students, The Many Roads to Japan is now available in print and
as a free online ESL reader that tells the story of the adventures of one
foreigner who had to follow many twists and turns in his life journey before
finding his niche in Japan. The exercises at the end of each chapter are
designed both to provide a review of the most important information contained
in the chapter and to give practice in skimming for main ideas and scanning
for specific kinds of information. The discussion/essay questions are meant
to involve the students personally by asking them to respond to events in
the main character's life and relate them to their own experiences. Over
50 links to historical, literary, and artistic web sites. Short recordings
by the author at the end of each chapter give learners listening practice
and answers to the questions. Suitable for low intermediate level and above.
"Mr. Norris's description of the world of adventure as well as that of
misery reminds me of Saul Bellow's The Adventures of Augie March, Henderson
the Rain King, or Herzog....Norris's story of a symbolic life
is a gift from his own experience, and it gives us something good, meaningful,
and inspiring....The comprehension questions, exercises, and discussion/essay
questions are quite useful in helping Japanese students to think in English
and in encouraging them to express themselves in English as well. This
is one of the ideal textbooks I have been looking for, and while using
it I am happy to say that I can steer clear of the traditional grammar-translation
method, which I find so time-consuming and ineffective." -- Professor
Kazushige Sagawa, Aoyama Gakuin University
"Excellent! I was mesmerized by the visual descriptions of all the places
seen by the narrator and the struggle he went through to find the meaning
of his life, and what he really wanted to do with the rest of it. I think
it's a great learning tool for any student, and it was certainly well written.
I'm putting it in my keeper file. There's a lot of information in there
you'd never find anywhere else. Once I started reading, I couldn't put it
down." -- Beth Anderson, author of Night Sounds, Murder Online,and
Second Generation
See the Asahi Shinbun interview in Japanese
- Click here for information
on downloading the free HTML or PDF versions for ESL teachers and students
- Click here to read the entire text
on my home page
- Click here
for information on how to order the print version for Japanese students.
Copyright (c) 1998-2006 Robert W. Norris. All Rights Reserved