The healing hippo of Hinode Park A novel

Michiko Aoyama, 1970-

Book - 2025

"Nestled at the bottom of a five-story apartment block in the community of Advance Hill is the children's playground in Hinode Park, where you will find a very special age-old hippo ride named Kabahiko. According to urban legend, if you touch the exact part of the hippo where you have an ailment or wound, you will see swift signs of recovery. Meet the neighbors who each find their way to Kabahiko: Kanato, desperately hopes to recover the stellar marks he once scored. Sawa, a new mother with no friends, wishes to be able to communicate as she once did when she was an award-winning retail assistant. Chiharu, a wedding planner, longs to listen better for the happiness of others. Yuya, avoids sports day with a fake injury, only to fin...d he really is in pain. Kazuhiko, despite his fading eyes from too much editorial work, seeks to see life's everyday wonders. A powerful story of hope, friendship and connection, Michiko Aoyama's beloved bestseller is a celebration of everyday encounters. Its subtle portrayal of the magic of community will lodge itself in every reader's heart as the eclectic characters find healing in their lives--though they may not always find it in the ways they expect."--Dust jacket flap.

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Subjects
Genres
Domestic fiction
FIC019000
FIC071000
FIC108000
FIC045000
Psychological fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
Toronto : Hanover Square Press 2025.
Language
English
Japanese
Main Author
Michiko Aoyama, 1970- (author)
Other Authors
Takami Nieda (translator)
Physical Description
243 pages : illustrations ; 19 cm
ISBN
9781335016331
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A collection of vignettes centered around the families living in a five-story condominium near Tokyo. Five stories intertwine in this novel that moves up from the first to fifth floor homes in the Advance Hill condominium building shortly after it's built. Each story offers a new, carefully wrought point of view from one of the residents in that condo. Schoolchildren like Kanato and Yuya who have just moved to the area; a mother, Sawa, who's trying to figure out her place in the world now that her daughter has started kindergarten; Chiharu, a 20-something wedding planner who is lonely and hoping for love; and Kazuhiko, a late-middle-aged magazine editor who has decided to move closer to his mother in the hopes of being able to help her. What ties them all together is a small, stationary children's ride at the park: a hippo named Kabahiko. Legend in the neighborhood is that if you touch Kabahiko on the part of his body where you yourself are injured, you will be healed. And each narrator discovers the truth of this--but it isn't magic. Instead, healing comes in the way in which each person's interactions with Kabahiko creates introspection that leads to enlightenment and a better understanding of the wider community. As Kazuhiko notes, "The thought of strangers living under the same roof, each with their own hopes and burdens, warmed my heart a little." Together, this is a sweet--perhaps overly sweet--set of stories that offers up the sentiment that sometimes what ails you can be traced back to a problematic point of view. But each story alone is enough to spark thoughtfulness and a small glow of happiness. Read them one at a time. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.