While searching for his own destiny, a dog changes the lives of lost souls.
In the wake of a tsunami in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, Kazumasa Nakagaki—a young man working as a delivery driver/getaway car operator—finds a stray dog politely waiting outside a convenience store. From the dog’s collar, Kazumasa learns that his name is Tamon and assumes that this is short for Tamonten, a Japanese guardian deity. And that is exactly what Tamon becomes for Kazumasa and many others throughout the novel: a guardian angel. Tamon protects Kazumasa as he carries out his illicit activities and tries to make money to support his family. Tamon brings joy to Kazumasa’s sister and his ailing mother, whose dementia leads her to believe that Tamon is her childhood dog (a pattern throughout as others associate Tamon with dogs from their pasts). But Kazumasa knows that Tamon, who is constantly and mysteriously turning to look toward the southwest, is not fated to stay with him, and when circumstances drag them apart, Tamon continues on his journey. In a story told in episodic vignettes, Tamon becomes the companion of a criminal, a wife with a deadbeat husband, a sex worker with a dark secret, and, perhaps most poignantly, an old man dying of cancer. Hase’s last vignette finds Tamon with a young boy whose early years have been marked by deep trauma. Hase’s staccato sentences and straightforward narrative structure should not be mistaken for shallowness. And while some stories are more affecting than others (“The Couple and the Dog” feels slightly awkward in its narrative arc), Hase’s novel is ultimately a touching meditation on shining lights in the face of trauma and hopelessness: “It’s your dog magic, I suppose. Dogs don’t just make people smile. They give us love and courage, too, just from being at our side.”
Heartbreakingly moving in its simplicity.