The Hole

No cover

David Boyd, Hiroko Oyamada: The Hole (2020, New Directions)

paperback, 112 pages

Published Oct. 6, 2020 by New Directions.

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3 stars (1 review)

Asa’s husband is transferring jobs, and his new office is located near his family’s home in the countryside. During an exceptionally hot summer, the young married couple move in, and Asa does her best to quickly adjust to their new rural lives, to their remoteness, to the constant presence of her in-laws and the incessant buzz of cicadas. While her husband is consumed with his job, Asa is left to explore her surroundings on her own: she makes trips to the supermarket, halfheartedly looks for work, and tries to find interesting ways of killing time.

One day, while running an errand for her mother-in-law, she comes across a strange creature, follows it to the embankment of a river, and ends up falling into a hole—a hole that seems to have been made specifically for her. This is the first in a series of bizarre experiences that drive Asa deeper into …

1 edition

A disorienting tale of lonliness

3 stars

Like the other works of hers that I've read, The Factory and Weasels in the Attic, Oyamada takes readers on a journey that begins in the world of the familiar and mundane and ends up in fantastical situations that you could never predict. In The Hole, a young woman and her husband move out of the city to a rural town, next door to his parent's home. In a claustrophobic, single-perspective narrative, we watch as the implications of this choice for the narrator unfold.