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This Is How You Lose Her
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This Is How You Lose Her : ウィキペディア英語版
This Is How You Lose Her

''This Is How You Lose Her'' is the second collection of short stories by Junot Díaz. It is the third of Díaz's books to feature his recurring protagonist Yunior, following his 1996 short story collection, ''Drown'' and his 2007 novel, ''The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao''.
==Stories==

''This Is How You Lose Her'' is composed of 9 interlinked short stories.
*"The Sun, The Moon, The Stars" was originally published in the 2 February 1998 edition of ''The New Yorker'' and was included in ''The Best American Short Stories 1999''. It traces Yunior taking Magdalena on a vacation to Santo Domingo in an unsuccessful effort to salvage their relationship.
*"Nilda" was originally published in the 4 October 1999 edition of ''The New Yorker'' and was included in ''The Best American Short Stories 2000''. Like in "The Pura Principle," the title character of "Nilda" is the girlfriend of Yunior's brother, Rafa. The basis of Nilda and Yunior's relationship is that she spends the night at Yunior and Rafa's house largely to avoid her drunken mother and Yunior develops a friendship with her as they talk together waiting for Rafa to get home at night. Nilda also dreams of opening a group home for runaway kids.
*"(Alma )" was originally published in the 24 December 2007 edition of ''The New Yorker'' and is the shortest story in the collection. Its final sentence is also from where the collection draws its title. Yunior has been dating the title character for eight months and the story takes place as she had opened his journal to learn that Yunior was cheating on her with another girl. Alma waits for him to publicly ridicule and dump him.
*"Otravida, Otravez" was originally published in the 21 July 1999 edition of ''The New Yorker'' and is an exception to the other stories in the collection as it is told from the perspective of a female character and does not document the decline of a relationship.
*"Flaca" was originally published in the Autumn 1999 edition of ''Story'' magazine. The title character is named Veronica Hardrada from Paterson, New Jersey and she meets Yunior in a James Joyce class in college. Despite their intentions, the two enter into a serious relationship that lasts two years.
*"(The Pura Principle )" was originally published in the 22 March 2010 edition of ''The New Yorker''. It is told from the first-person perspective of Yunior and begins: "Those last months. No way of wrapping it pretty or pretending otherwise: Rafa estaba jodido." The story recalls Rafa's battle with leukemia and his subsequent relationship with Pura, whom he eventually marries, which strains Rafa's relationship with Mamí and Yunior. Eventually Rafa and Pura move out and Mamí allows Rafa to take money from her, pretending she does not know otherwise.
*"Invierno" has been described as "the collection's most subtly devastating story, unfurls an exquisite, threadbare tapestry of alienation. Yunior, along with his mother and older brother, Rafa, has just arrived in New Jersey from Santo Domingo, relocated by the father he barely knows."〔 Papi has been working in the U.S. for five years, while Yunior, Rafa, and Mami have waited in Santo Domingo. It traces Yunior's family having difficulty learning English, Papi working days at a time without coming home, Mami being depressed, housebound, and missing Santo Domingo, and Yunior and Rafa trying to find familiarity in school and with their neighbors. It closes with a scene involving snowflakes scattering across Yunior's cold, hard scalp.
*"(Miss Lora )" was originally published in the 23 April 2012 edition of ''The New Yorker.'' In this story, "a teenage Yunior ponders his emergent lust in the context of Papi and Rafa’s rutting ways."〔 Miss Lora is a middle-aged woman and one of Yunior's neighbors. He has a sexual relationship with her and she eventually becomes a substitute teacher at his high school. "Miss Lora" was included in ''The Best American Short Stories 2013'' and won the 2013 ''The Sunday Times'' EFG Short Story award.〔http://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/mar/22/junot-diaz-wins-short-story-prize〕 Díaz also described this story as being the "absolute easiest" to write in the collection.〔http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/30/magazine/junot-diaz-hates-writing-short-stories.html?pagewanted=2〕
*"The Cheater’s Guide to Love" was originally published in the 23 July 2012 edition of ''The New Yorker.'' It spans five years and traces Yunior's initial break-up and his subsequent relationships of varying lengths. Díaz establishes a parallel between Yunior's love live and the marriage of his friend, Elvis, an Iraq War veteran. It begins: "Your girl catches you cheating. (Well, actually she's your fiancé, but hey, in a bit it ''so'' won't matter.) She could have caught you with one sucia, she could have caught you with two, but as you're a totally bat shit cuero who didn't ever empty his e-mail trash can, she caught you with fifty! Sure, over a six-year period, but still. Fifty fucking girls? God''damn''."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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