"The confessions of the characters, full of passion and intensity, are writ large in the book. A lot more of these 'insights' of the heart and mind makes for a didactic novel, but the ideas must be welcomed for their honesty and the forthcoming way they were blurted out and shared. Nowaki is not only an epigrammatic novel, with every other page containing the kind of insane quotes worth underlining, but also a key work closely tethered to the novelist's themes. It explicitly identifies and discusses the abstractions that beset the protagonists of later novels. It could be SĂ´seki's most 'preachy' novel, surprisingly political in parts, and is a definite throwback to the subtle feelings and subdued atmospheres generated by works such as Kokoro and Mon. Nevertheless it illuminates the undercurrent of cynicism running through his mature novels. More than a novel, [Nowaki] is an 'essay on character.'" -- Rise.
Nowaki