전체상품목록 바로가기

본문 바로가기


The Diving Pool Yoko Ogawa.pdf 1 Upd

Central to the novella’s power is the chilling unreliability of Aya’s first-person narration. She speaks of her love for Jun with a disarming frankness, yet her actions betray a complete lack of empathy. She writes letters to her parents that are filled with fabricated details about Jun’s misbehavior, letters she never mails, existing only as artifacts of her desire to control. In one of the most unsettling sequences, she hides a small, sharp stone in Jun’s shoe before a practice dive, then watches, detached, as he cuts his foot. “I wanted to keep him forever,” she thinks, “in a place where he would always be hurting just a little.” This is the novella’s moral core: Aya’s love is indistinguishable from cruelty. Ogawa suggests that in the vacuum of genuine affection (her parents are distant, preoccupied with the orphanage), the impulse to possess another person curdles into a need to inflict pain. She does not hate Jun; she wants to absorb him, and the only way to make him dependent is to make him vulnerable.

📖 The Diving Pool - Yoko Ogawa.

Perfect for a "dark academia" or moody reading vibe. The Diving Pool Yoko Ogawa.pdf 1

Aya is not a villain in the traditional sense. She feels no rage, no jealousy. She describes her actions—stealing Jun’s letters, putting tranquilizers in his food, hiding his sister’s pacifier—with the same flat affect she uses to describe the weather. This is the story’s most chilling feature: evil as a form of . Aya is not mad; she is simply under-stimulated, and other people become her toys. Ogawa suggests that cruelty does not require a motive. It requires only opportunity and a numbed conscience. Central to the novella’s power is the chilling

Aya is not an orphan. She is the biological daughter of the director, a lonely, voyeuristic teenager who spies on the younger children. Her obsession, however, focuses on one specific boy: a quiet, vulnerable orphan named Jun. Aya’s narration unfolds in a calm, journal-like tone as she describes her secret rituals: sneaking into the pool at night, watching Jun swim, and eventually, committing a series of quiet, insidious acts of cruelty—including lacing Jun’s food with a sedative and hiding his baby sister’s belongings to make her seem unwanted. In one of the most unsettling sequences, she

Yoko Ogawa's novella The Diving Pool explores themes of psychological unease and emotional neglect through the story of Aya, a teenager at her parents' orphanage, whose quiet obsession with her foster brother highlights themes of loneliness and detachment. The narrative employs minimalist prose and evocative motifs, such as the clinical setting of a swimming pool, to craft a haunting portrait of adolescent isolation and moral ambiguity. Share public link


WORLD SHIPPING

PLEASE SELECT THE DESTINATION COUNTRY AND LANGUAGE :

GO
close

CUSTOMER CENTER

● M2U RECORD

☏ (+82)02-3143-3946

1F, 87-14, Sinchon-ro, Seodaemun-gu,

Seoul, KOREA


앗! 화면폭이 너무 좁아요.
브라우져의 사이즈를 더 늘여주세요~

좁은 화면으로 보실 때는 모바일 기기에서
최적화된 화면으로 쇼핑을 즐기실 수 있어요~