Japan Times: A diary washed ashore opens up a world of multiple realities

A good read transcends into the eternal, melding the real now with a timeless present. Ruth Ozeki’s “A Tale for the Time Being” is all that and more: a quietly amazing achievement, a careful construct bridging quantum physics and the role of the reader/observer, a Zen eternity of multiple realities within a single I-novel/not a novel.
— Kris Kosaka, Japan Times

July 14, 2013
The Japan Times
A diary washed ashore opens up a world of multiple realities
Kris Kosaka

Omnivoracious: Ruth Ozeki on Zen and the Art of Creativity

Like both of Ozeki’s other books, this one can be read on at least two levels: it’s a story within a story about a lonely Japanese girl and it’s a way to write about old Japan vs. new, about traditional Japanese womanhood versus contemporary Japanese American women, about, as Ozeki says, authenticity.
— Sara Nelson, Omnivoracious

April 08, 2013
Omnivoracious
Interview: Ruth Ozeki on Zen and the Art of Creativity
Sara Nelson