[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"work-reviews-detail-breasts-and-eggs-rwr9":3,"work-reviews-list-breasts-and-eggs-rwr9":214},{"id":4,"slug":5,"title":6,"original_title":7,"description":8,"first_publish_year":9,"original_language":10,"primary_cover_url":11,"cover_3d_url":12,"cover_blurhash":13,"preferred_edition_id":7,"community_rating_avg":14,"community_rating_count":15,"page_count":16,"estimated_reading_minutes":17,"shelves_added_this_week":18,"enrichment_status":19,"community_depth_avg":7,"community_momentum_avg":7,"community_atmosphere_avg":7,"community_craft_avg":7,"community_impact_avg":7,"community_spice_avg":7,"is_non_fiction":20,"is_romance":20,"is_indexable":21,"rating_distribution":22,"authors":24,"genres":31,"characters":44,"places":62,"subjects":69,"series":140,"editions":141,"enrichment":193,"community_distribution":7,"default_edition":203,"faqs":212,"reviews_count":15,"contributions_count":18,"quotes_count":18,"photos_count":18,"created_at":213},"01kkc5yyb55aenfwahpzhgmane","breasts-and-eggs-rwr9","Breasts and Eggs",null,"Over a sweltering summer in Tokyo, Natsuko Natsume, a struggling writer from a poor Osaka background, hosts her older sister Makiko and Makiko's twelve-year-old daughter Midoriko. Makiko has become fixated on getting breast enhancement surgery, chasing a sense of control over a body worn down by work and age, while Midoriko, on the cusp of puberty and furious at the changes coming for her own body, has stopped speaking to her mother entirely and communicates only through a notebook.\n\nThe novel's second half leaps forward several years to follow Natsuko alone as she wrestles with a very different question: whether to have a child on her own, outside marriage and conventional expectation, by seeking a sperm donor. Around her, a chorus of women voice their own experiences of motherhood, donor conception, and the female body.\n\nMieko Kawakami's breakthrough novel, translated from the Japanese by Sam Bett and David Boyd, is a frank, expansive work about class, womanhood, and bodily autonomy in contemporary Japan. Earthy and philosophical by turns, Breasts and Eggs established Kawakami as one of the most important voices in Japanese literature.",2019,"ja","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Fcovers\u002Feditions\u002F01\u002F01ktt1dyg39qh7mcqmwyb5nf4q.jpg?v=7b1c628638","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Fcovers\u002Fworks-3d\u002F01\u002F01kkc5yyb55aenfwahpzhgmane.png?v=727ede0086","LBQR,_%#}[.8={ofozRk^*xaNGof","4.00",3,432,491,0,"pending",false,true,[18,18,18,18,18,23,18,23,18,23],1,[25],{"id":26,"slug":27,"name":28,"role":29,"bio":30},"01kkc5jvf8q0mckw28mwhr0x7f","mieko-kawakami-1zyy","Mieko Kawakami","author","Mieko Kawakami is a Japanese writer known for her honest explorations of womanhood, class, and the body. Her major novels include Breasts and Eggs, Heaven, and All the Lovers in the",[32,36,40],{"id":33,"name":34,"slug":35,"is_fiction":21},9,"Literary Fiction","literary-fiction",{"id":37,"name":38,"slug":39,"is_fiction":21},144,"Women's Fiction","womens-fiction",{"id":41,"name":42,"slug":43,"is_fiction":21},59,"Contemporary Literature","contemporary-literature",[45,49,53,58],{"id":46,"name":47,"description":7,"role":48,"is_spoiler":20},"01kjr273yk2nv4mmrd67k0maj3","The Narrator","protagonist",{"id":50,"name":51,"description":52,"role":48,"is_spoiler":20},"01kww9v4t2mh408bkcxd5f5h0w","Natsuko Natsume","A struggling writer wrestling with whether to have a child alone via sperm donor.",{"id":54,"name":55,"description":56,"role":57,"is_spoiler":20},"01kkc5yyjrwg6fawbaqkhn0q39","Makiko","Natsuko's older sister, fixated on breast enhancement surgery.","supporting",{"id":59,"name":60,"description":61,"role":57,"is_spoiler":20},"01kkc5yyk1x4an0bewbprskh45","Midoriko","Makiko's daughter, who has stopped speaking and writes in a notebook.",[63,66],{"id":64,"name":65,"description":7,"is_fictional":20,"real_world_location":7},"01kk47b5gc83yd9qy20hgeer9z","Tokyo",{"id":67,"name":68,"description":7,"is_fictional":20,"real_world_location":7},"01kk4jxhr1y31yc6nktvx6gz5k","Osaka",[70,74,77,80,83,86,89,92,95,98,101,104,107,110,113,116,119,122,125,128,131,134,137],{"id":71,"name":72,"type":73},"01kjq6wyccmk2w4mf3aam73k3p","Fiction, family life","subject",{"id":75,"name":76,"type":73},"01kjq7vvg9k0xhwvjtenf3gq1d","Japan, fiction",{"id":78,"name":79,"type":73},"01kjq72m4hfxd5fmh6zpyfgatq","Fiction, women",{"id":81,"name":82,"type":73},"01kjq6vgkpcdc647a9z7bypsdk","New York Times reviewed",{"id":84,"name":85,"type":73},"01kjq6wyeahfxhxragbmkzr1rz","Fiction, family life, general",{"id":87,"name":88,"type":73},"01kjq76mpybft467scjk5k34gz","Women",{"id":90,"name":91,"type":73},"01kjq704f5bve4t364r8nsff40","Identity",{"id":93,"name":94,"type":73},"01kkc5yyg8nndevbnhagqg9ssn","Augmentation mammaplasty",{"id":96,"name":97,"type":73},"01kjrg4jprggv3pfs0fdgam49s","Puberty",{"id":99,"name":100,"type":73},"01kjqtywa4cwzx0p5p2zhmrtke","Aging",{"id":102,"name":103,"type":73},"01kjq6wyf02z4z2wsrfr3wdwkf","Families",{"id":105,"name":106,"type":73},"01kjq7ehm449j1ge8ggb95p514","Femmes",{"id":108,"name":109,"type":73},"01kjq6v9h1askcq1gcr9esa879","Romans, nouvelles",{"id":111,"name":112,"type":73},"01kjt4qnxz08zcgyswmk26h7c5","Identité",{"id":114,"name":115,"type":73},"01kkc5yyh29wg97f8q2cpjtse1","Mammoplastie d'augmentation",{"id":117,"name":118,"type":73},"01kkc5yyh9c647z5cvjtcd319r","Puberté",{"id":120,"name":121,"type":73},"01kjswh8nynqmyycs9419y5vb8","Vieillissement",{"id":123,"name":124,"type":73},"01kjq750dvw3qj8snn90p33wt3","Aspect psychologique",{"id":126,"name":127,"type":73},"01kjq75vs6jjepr0kwkkx099he","Familles",{"id":129,"name":130,"type":73},"01kjq734jx2bn2b9gapbnyzf9q","Psychological aspects",{"id":132,"name":133,"type":73},"01kjrb2rn2symfqbejdzhag4dq","Gender identity",{"id":135,"name":136,"type":73},"01kkc5yyj54mw68n0yqy25ehbr","Breast augmentation",{"id":138,"name":139,"type":73},"01kkc5yyjaaff2g4y6q1ts6n5r","Family members",[],[142,157,165,175,183],{"id":143,"title":144,"edition_name":145,"format":146,"format_label":147,"page_count":148,"audio_duration_minutes":7,"narrator":7,"publish_date":149,"cover_url":150,"cover_blurhash":151,"isbn_13":152,"asin":7,"publisher":153,"language":154,"quality_score":155,"submission_status":156},"01ktt1e7pfck33gzjap9h80a3z","Senos y huevos","1","paperback","Paperback",120,"Oct 01, 2013","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Fcovers\u002Feditions\u002F01\u002F01ktt1e7pfck33gzjap9h80a3z.jpg?v=7570c0eef0","LEQPj9-BUb$PoffkenfkhfayqFbH","9788494116346","Sdedicions","spa",11,"approved",{"id":158,"title":6,"edition_name":7,"format":146,"format_label":147,"page_count":16,"audio_duration_minutes":7,"narrator":7,"publish_date":159,"cover_url":160,"cover_blurhash":7,"isbn_13":161,"asin":7,"publisher":162,"language":163,"quality_score":164,"submission_status":156},"01kkc5yydd6cmmnvh2xr86m1ps","Apr 20, 2021","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Fcovers\u002Feditions\u002F01\u002F01kkc5yydd6cmmnvh2xr86m1ps.jpg","9781609456702","Europa Editions","en",10,{"id":166,"title":6,"edition_name":7,"format":167,"format_label":168,"page_count":169,"audio_duration_minutes":7,"narrator":7,"publish_date":170,"cover_url":171,"cover_blurhash":172,"isbn_13":173,"asin":7,"publisher":174,"language":163,"quality_score":164,"submission_status":156},"01kkc5yydqpvs73gfbpcw2z9sk","hardcover","Hardcover",192,"Apr 16, 2020","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Fcovers\u002Feditions\u002F01\u002F01kkc5yydqpvs73gfbpcw2z9sk.jpg","LpJ72jSgM{$*}]xuxaM|^kbHRjt6","9781509898206","Picador",{"id":176,"title":6,"edition_name":177,"format":167,"format_label":168,"page_count":178,"audio_duration_minutes":7,"narrator":7,"publish_date":179,"cover_url":180,"cover_blurhash":181,"isbn_13":182,"asin":7,"publisher":162,"language":163,"quality_score":155,"submission_status":156},"01kkc5yye2ep1hx14mwpqr1tsx","First Edition",448,"Apr 07, 2020","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Fcovers\u002Feditions\u002F01\u002F01kkc5yye2ep1hx14mwpqr1tsx.jpg","LBQ+KN-p~qxa-oofbcRj~VofM|ay","9781609455873",{"id":184,"title":185,"edition_name":7,"format":146,"format_label":147,"page_count":186,"audio_duration_minutes":7,"narrator":7,"publish_date":187,"cover_url":188,"cover_blurhash":189,"isbn_13":190,"asin":7,"publisher":191,"language":192,"quality_score":164,"submission_status":156},"01ktt1e2c4tcxt4r313xsaw18x","Peitos e ovos",480,"2023","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Fcovers\u002Feditions\u002F01\u002F01ktt1e2c4tcxt4r313xsaw18x.jpg?v=b31a164292","L9H^9l-=00VE8wROUa%3^Qoz5lNZ","9786555608311","Intrínseca","por",{"summary":7,"pace":194,"complexity":195,"complexity_score":196,"audience":197,"mood":198,"themes":201,"setting_period":7,"content_warnings":202},"slow","dense",7,"adult",[199,200],"reflective","melancholic",[],[],{"id":204,"title":6,"edition_name":205,"format":206,"format_label":207,"page_count":16,"audio_duration_minutes":7,"publish_date":208,"cover_url":11,"cover_blurhash":13,"isbn_13":209,"asin":7,"publisher":210,"language":211},"01ktt1dyg39qh7mcqmwyb5nf4q","17","unknown","Unknown","2020","9781609455880","Europa Editions, Incorporated","eng",[],"2026-03-10T15:31:01.000000Z",{"data":215,"links":256,"meta":257},[216,233,247],{"id":217,"slug":218,"title":219,"user":220,"work_id":4,"is_draft":20,"verified_reader":21,"featured":20,"body":227,"overall_rating":228,"depth":7,"momentum":7,"atmosphere":7,"craft":7,"impact":7,"spice":7,"spoiler_level":229,"locale":7,"feed_item_key":230,"like_count":18,"comment_count":18,"top_likers":231,"viewer_can_reply":20,"created_at":232,"updated_at":232},"01kwdx79w4ax1qe1vb8ahtgcfw","review-of-breasts-and-eggs-by-patient-bookworm","Review of \"Breasts and Eggs\" by patient_bookworm",{"id":221,"name":222,"username":223,"avatar_url":224,"is_system":20,"published_reviews_count":225,"books_read_count":226},575,"Patient Bookworm","patient_bookworm","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Favatars\u002F575.webp?v=1782877720",369,461,"Breasts and Eggs is an extraordinary, unflinching excavation of what it means to inhabit a female body in contemporary Japan and by extension, what it means to be a woman navigating desire, motherhood, autonomy, and the relentless machinery of societal expectation. Mieko Kawakami has written something that feels urgent and necessary, a novel that refuses to look away from the quiet devastations that accumulate when women are allowed to want only what society deems appropriate.\n\nThe structure itself is brilliant two separate narratives separated by a decade, each one a window into how the three central characters grapple with femininity, desire, and the body. In the first section, we meet Natsuko, a struggling writer living alone in a modest Tokyo apartment, when her older sister Makiko arrives from Osaka with her 12-year-old daughter Midoriko. Makiko's ostensible purpose is to consult about breast augmentation surgery; she has spent years convinced that her body is insufficient, that her value is bound up in her physical desirability. Midoriko, caught between childhood and adolescence, has stopped speaking entirely her silence a form of rebellion against the pressures of her changing body and her mother's self-obsession.\n\nWhat moved me most is how Kawakami uses these three women as a prism for examining different relationships to the female body and desire. Makiko's desperation for surgery isn't shallow vanity it's rooted in economic necessity, in the collapse of her value as a hostess as her looks fade, in the devastation of aging in a society that measures women's worth by their sexual desirability. Midoriko's silence expresses a profound refusal she will not perform femininity, will not pretend to want the things girls are supposed to want. Natsuko stands apart, having long ago given up on conforming to feminine ideals, yet she struggles to understand her sister's choices while simultaneously wrestling with her own internalized shame about her body.\n\nThe translation by Sam Bett and David G. Boyd is remarkable they've managed to preserve Kawakami's unflinching directness while capturing the particular rhythm of the prose, the way she moves fluidly between characters' perspectives. The novel doesn't shy away from explicit discussion of the female body, menstruation, sexuality, reproduction there's a radical honesty here that refuses the euphemisms and discretion typically applied to women's embodied experience. When Midoriko's thoughts appear through her journal entries, we're given access to a twelve-year-old's raw, honest processing of puberty and socialization in ways that feel authentic and devastating.\n\nWhat becomes clear is that this novel is ultimately about agency and the impossibility of it in a society that has predetermined what women are allowed to want. When Natsuko begins considering motherhood through artificial insemination when she dares to imagine having a child without a partner, without conforming to the conventional family structure she faces immediate resistance. Everyone has opinions; everyone knows what's appropriate, what's irresponsible, what she should do. Yet Kawakami handles these conflicts with such compassion, showing us how people genuinely believe they're being protective or moral even as they work to constrain and control.\n\nThe second part of the novel, set ten years later, returns to Natsuko as she begins to reckon with her choices and the paths she's taken. She's successfully published, she's earning money, she's able to support her sister yet she's also haunted by loss, by the weight of family legacies and the ghosts of her dead mother and grandmother. The novel becomes almost surreal as these memories and presences intrude on her consciousness, adding a dimension of magical realism that grounds the deeply psychological exploration. When she finally reveals her plans for motherhood, it disrupts the fragile balance that has been reestablished between herself and her sister.\n\nWhat I found most powerful is Kawakami's refusal to present simple answers. She doesn't condemn Makiko for wanting breast surgery, nor does she celebrate it; instead, she asks us to understand how women are trapped in systems that limit their choices while simultaneously bearing responsibility for those choices. She doesn't judge Midoriko's silence as empowering or pathological; she shows it as a complex response to unbearable pressure. She doesn't position Natsuko's desire for motherhood as inherently feminist or radical; she shows it as something messy and complicated, shaped by her own traumas and longings.\n\nThe kitchen scene where the tension between Makiko and Midoriko finally breaks where eggs, that recurring symbol of fertility and nourishment, become the vessel through which connection happens is one of the most beautiful moments I've encountered in recent fiction. It's not a resolution that solves anything, but rather a moment of genuine understanding between two women who have been speaking past each other.\n\nKawakami also handles the dimensions of class with precision. Natsuko's apartment is small and shabby; Makiko works in low-paying service work; Midoriko moves between economic classes as she grows. The economic realities that constrain women's choices are never invisible in this novel they're woven into every decision, every desire, every possibility and impossibility.\n\nBreasts and Eggs is a novel about the female body, yes, but more importantly it's about consciousness and resistance, about how women develop subjectivity and agency within systems designed to deny them both. It's about the particular loneliness of not fitting into prescribed roles, about the complicated love between women who have survived different forms of harm. It's about what it means to want things that society tells you shouldn't want, and what courage that requires.\n\nThis is essential reading not because it's comfortable or reassuring, but because it insists on looking directly at what has been hidden, at what women are expected to endure in silence. Kawakami's prose is precise and unsparing, and the emotional landscape she constructs is one of genuine depth and complexity. Breasts and Eggs is a major work of contemporary fiction, and it deserves to be read and reread, discussed and argued about.",5,"none","rv-01kwdx79w4ax1qe1vb8ahtgcfw",[],"2026-07-01T03:58:03.000000Z",{"id":234,"slug":235,"title":236,"user":237,"work_id":4,"is_draft":20,"verified_reader":21,"featured":20,"body":7,"overall_rating":15,"depth":7,"momentum":7,"atmosphere":7,"craft":7,"impact":7,"spice":7,"spoiler_level":229,"locale":7,"feed_item_key":244,"like_count":18,"comment_count":18,"top_likers":245,"viewer_can_reply":20,"created_at":246,"updated_at":246},"01ktszxmvjhejzbbr06hkbvq9a","review-of-breasts-and-eggs-by-cassandra-navarro","Review of \"Breasts and Eggs\" by cassandra_navarro",{"id":238,"name":239,"username":240,"avatar_url":241,"is_system":20,"published_reviews_count":242,"books_read_count":243},484,"Cass","pagespawsandpetals","https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fstorage\u002Favatars\u002F484.webp?v=1781136749",597,603,"rv-01ktszxmvjhejzbbr06hkbvq9a",[],"2026-06-11T00:04:42.000000Z",{"id":248,"slug":249,"title":250,"user":7,"work_id":4,"is_draft":20,"verified_reader":21,"featured":20,"body":251,"overall_rating":252,"depth":7,"momentum":7,"atmosphere":7,"craft":7,"impact":7,"spice":7,"spoiler_level":229,"locale":7,"feed_item_key":253,"like_count":18,"comment_count":18,"top_likers":254,"viewer_can_reply":20,"created_at":255,"updated_at":255},"01kr83ft9ptwgb5mtrsfc2gea1","review-of-breasts-and-eggs-by-deleted-258","Review of \"Breasts and Eggs\" by deleted_258","\"My life was like a dusty shelf in an old bookstore, where every volume was exactly where it had been for ages, the only discernible change being that my body has aged another ten years.\"\n\nA story on exploration of both womanhood and adulthood and the unsettling debate of self-image of one's appearance and people's acceptance and perception.\n\nA well written prose, neat and compelling; kind of love its intriguing intricacies of femininity narrative; the sharp observation of female's views on their desire and emotional stage also discomfort, on relationship, marriage and pregnancies. A riveting 'mundane' vibe that I sort of fancy, from the life of Natsuko and her sister and niece to a ten years later when Natsuko became a writer and returning to memories of the past as she faces her own uncertain future. \n\nLove the subtopic it tries to highlight-- on family and friendship, domestic abuse and psychological health, also on social and that pinch of contemporary Japanese lifestyle. All the women are too broken and I kind of understand their opinion of life. We grow from our experiences and I think it's okay to be 'moody' about it. \n\nRegardless how descriptive and the overlong book two, I still find it as an enthralling read and fairly thought-provoking.",4,"rv-01kr83ft9ptwgb5mtrsfc2gea1",[],"2026-05-10T04:49:20.000000Z",{"first":7,"last":7,"prev":7,"next":7},{"path":258,"per_page":259,"next_cursor":7,"prev_cursor":7,"has_more":20},"https:\u002F\u002Fapi.seekquel.app\u002Fapi\u002Fworks\u002F01kkc5yyb55aenfwahpzhgmane\u002Freviews",20]