I haven’t read much Japanese literature so when I saw Mieko Kawakami’s novel Breasts and Eggs at a booksale I picked it up, recalling it had caused much interest among readers at the time of its translation into English. It caused a significant reaction in Japan when originally published, a bestseller spurned by traditionalists.
It was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year and one of TIME’s Best 10 Books of 2020 and established the author as something of a feminist icon, exploring the inner lives of women through the ages.
A Woman’s Lot
Breasts and Eggs is set in two time periods eight years apart and centres around 30 year old woman Natsuko, a writer living in Tokyo and those two themes, Breasts and Eggs; or Appearance and Mothering.
I’m still in the same apartment with the slanted, peeling walls and the same overbearing afternoon sun, surviving off the same minimum wage job, working full time for not a whole lot more than 100,000 yen a month, and still writing and writing, with no idea whether it’s ever going to get me anywhere. My life was like a dusty shelf in an old book store, where every volume was exactly where it had been for ages, the only discernable change being that my body has aged another ten years.
Silence Speaks Volumes
In the first part of the book her sister Makiko comes to visit with her 12 year old daughter Midoriko, who has stopped speaking to her mother. She writes her responses, we read her perspective through a few journal entries, which has become the place where she has conversations she is missing elsewhere.
Unspoken Job Requirements
Makiko is an ageing hostess whose occupation demands certain expectations of looks and she has become obsessed with breast augmentation surgery to the neglect of all else. It has been the topic of conversation with her sister for the last three months. Natsuko realises she doesn’t want her advice, just a sounding board. Their mother died when the girls were teenagers from breast cancer.
…after all these years, at thirty-nine, she still works at a bar five nights a week, living pretty much the same life as our mum. Another single mother, working herself to death.
While her sister goes for a consultation Natsuko spends time with her niece and ponders women’s bodies, pains, expectations, grievances, self-judgments, societal judgments, obsessions. During the visit, the three women confront their issues, desires and frustrations, building to resolution.
When Time Is Running Out and All is On the Table
In Part Two, eight years have passed and now it is Natsuko who arrives at an age of obsession, only her focus is on eggs, or the desire to have a child and the dilemma of not being in a relationship when the age of becoming eggless is in sight.
A Making Children Medical Procedure
She begins to research alternative ways of conceiving, finding ways to learn more and to meet people she might be able to discuss her desire. In doing so she discovers there is more to the subject than just a woman’s desire, there are moral considerations she hasn’t considered, that might affect her decision.
“Neither the medical community, not the parents who undergo this type of treatment, have adequately considered how the children – and this is about the children – will eventually see themselves,” Aizawa said, in summary. “As for donors, most of them haven’t given much thought to these issues, either. For them, it’s something akin to giving blood. Legal reform has a long, long way to go, but recent attention to the child’s right to know had led more and more hospitals to suspend treatment entirely…”
The Child Who Grows Up Not Knowing Shares As an Adult
Her interest leads her to new connections that increase the depth of her understanding and options available to her. By the time she makes her decision, she will be significantly more informed and understand the situation from multiple perspectives.
I thought about what I had said, but couldn’t explain what I meant. What made me want to know this person? What did I think it meant to have me as a mother? Who, or what, exactly, was I expecting? I knew I wasn’t making any sense, but I was doing all I could to string the words together and convey that meeting this person, whoever they may wind up being, was absolutely crucial to me.
It is an interesting, thought-provoking look at the lives of women trying to find fulfillment while navigating the challenges of single motherhood, health, womanhood, reproductive rights and familial relationships in non-nuclear families.
Further Reading
Article: Mieko Kawakami’s books: a complete guide, Naomi Frisby on literary sensation Mieko Kawakami Nov 2024
Guardian Interview: Mieko Kawakami: ‘Women are no longer content to shut up’ David McNeil, 18 Aug 2020
“I try to write from the child’s perspective – how they see the world,” says Kawakami. “Coming to the realisation that you’re alive is such a shock. One day, we’re thrown into life with no warning. And at some point, every one of us will die. It’s very hard to comprehend.”
Author, Mieko Kawakami
Born in Osaka, Japan Kawakami made her literary debut as a poet in 2006 and in 2007 published her first novella My Ego, My Teeth, And the World. Heaven, translated by Sam Bett and David Boyd, was shortlisted for the 2022 International Booker Prize.
Known for their poetic qualities, their insights into the female body and their preoccupation with ethics and the modern society, her books have been translated into over twenty languages. Her most recent novel that has been translated into English is All the Lovers in the Night.
Kawakami’s literary awards include the Akutagawa Prize, the Tanizaki Prize, and the Murasaki Shikibu Prize. She lives in Tokyo, Japan.


Such gorgeous gardens
LikeLiked by 1 person
I enjoyed reading All the Lovers in the Night; there is some sort of distance between the reader and the main character in that book, and interestingly, I liked that. I think it was the simple yet poetic language. This one is on my bookshelf too!
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s good to hear you enjoyed another of her novels, I am certainly intrigued to read more.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I loved this, more than the other two of hers I’ve read (All The Lovers in the Night and Heaven). The image of the sleeping children will haunt me forever.
LikeLiked by 2 people
The longer I leave this the more I think about it, I have a feeling it’s one of those books that stays with you. Not only an interesting story, but so evocative of place and the conversations between characters, the underlying emotional intensity I guess.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi Claire 🌺
I read All the Lovers in the Night and loved it. I have Breast and Eggs & Heaven not yet read.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That’s good to know you enjoyed All the Lovers in the Night Sylvie, she is an interesting writer. I hope you enjoy Breats and Eggs too.
LikeLike
I’m definitely interested in reading this at some point, mainly because I really liked her other two books in translation – Heaven and All the Lovers…
She tackles some big societal themes – bullying, mental illness, toxic work-based relationships – in interesting ways while also keeping a clear focus on her characters. This sounds very thought-provoking, too.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I think it is those big societal themes and the courage she shows in tackling them, in daring to have her characters go deep into them is what I really enjoyed, particularly coming from a different culture than my own, but representing universal themes never the less.
When you hear that a novel stirred up the patriarchy, it is always interesting to reflect on what the threat is perceived to be.
LikeLike
Although I liked this I’m not sure it’s her best – the two parts didn’t quite join for me and it became quite didactic in parts if I remember rightly.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It took a while after finishing to reflect on why the two parts had that element of separation, but then I thought that is actually like life, a decade later and a woman’s judgments and perspectives that she may have had on another (her sister) could equally be applied to herself, due to the societal pressures or expectations on a woman or selfish desire, both aspects focusing on a woman finding ways to have greater control over her body.
Those parts that may have been didactic I felt contributed something important to the narrative, they would certainly create or stimulate interesting talk points and may have been in part what created the controversy around the novel.
For me I thought it was excellent the way that she gave voice to the grown up ‘baby’ those people whose human rights are continuously overridden by adults in pursuit of selfish desire who thoughtlessly remove people’s identities and lineage.
LikeLike
This has been vaguely on my TBR list for a while. It’s now rather more firmly on it!
LikeLiked by 1 person
That’s exactly how it was for me, those books that are vaguely on the TBR and then they appear in front of you and a holiday looms, I seem to be getting through a few of those currently!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Great review! I think you captured it all perfectly.
LikeLike
Thank you, it was such a great read.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I tried really hard to get into this one and love the characters. I just couldn’t connect with them or the story though. I like how you have broken down important themes of this book. Without a doubt it seems to be important for the themes it discusses I was so excited to start reading it but the couldn’t go on. Thanks for your comprehensive review.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It wasn’t an easy read and at times I felt I was persevering, but I enjoyed it the more, on reflection, when I thought about those themes and the severe reaction it caused in Japanese society, for daring to represent these views, that I find courageous and bold and also enlightening, because it gives us insight into the issues women face in another culture and country that are not too different ftom other parts of the world.
LikeLike
I have read a lot of Japanese women’s lit, can I make a few recommendations if you would like to seek them out: Convenience Store Woman and the Full Moon Coffee Shop which I reviewed here (Sometimes I review books but its also a lot of other eclectic stuff like music and quirky finds from the internet) https://contentcatnip.com/2025/02/06/book-review-the-full-moon-coffee-shop-by-mai-mochizuki/
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for the recommendations, that’s so kind of you to share them, I have seen Convenience Store Women reviewed but not Full Moon Coffee Shop, I’ll check it out.
I really enjoyed Child of Fortune by Yūko Tsushima and would like to read more of her work.
LikeLiked by 1 person