What We Are Reading Today: A Brief Welcome to the Universe

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Updated 08 September 2021
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What We Are Reading Today: A Brief Welcome to the Universe

Authors: Neil deGrasse Tyson, J. Richard Gott, and Michael A. Strauss

A Brief Welcome to the Universe offers a breathtaking tour of the cosmos, from planets, stars, and galaxies to black holes and time loops. Bestselling authors and acclaimed astrophysicists Neil deGrasse Tyson, Michael A. Strauss, and J. Richard Gott take readers on an unforgettable journey of exploration to reveal how our universe actually works.
Propelling you from our home solar system to the outermost frontiers of space, this book builds your cosmic insight and perspective through a marvelously entertaining narrative. How do stars live and die? What are the prospects of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe? How did the universe begin? Why is it expanding and accelerating? Is our universe alone or part of an infinite multiverse? Exploring these and many other questions, this pocket-friendly book is your passport into the wonders of our evolving cosmos.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘All the Lovers in the Night’

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Updated 03 February 2026
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘All the Lovers in the Night’

  • Loneliness and the longing for connection sit at the heart of the novel, alongside clear-eyed examination of the ways people wound one another, sometimes unintentionally and sometimes through their own inaction

Author: Mieko Kawakami

One of my recent reads was “All the Lovers in the Night” by Mieko Kawakami, translated from Japanese by Sam Bett and David Boyd. With its contemplative, poetic yet restrained style, the 2022 novel feels best suited to late nights or unhurried stretches of reading. 

The story follows Fuyuko, a copyeditor in her thirties living a life marked by isolation. Her days pass in careful routine until she meets Mitsutsuka, an older man whose presence subtly begins to alter her perception of the world and of herself. 

Fuyuko’s interior life is shaped by fear, hesitation and a profound sense of disconnection, captured in one of the novel’s most arresting lines: “I was so scared of failing, of being hurt, that I chose nothing. I did nothing.”

Loneliness and the longing for connection sit at the heart of the novel, alongside clear-eyed examination of the ways people wound one another, sometimes unintentionally and sometimes through their own inaction. 

Kawakami is attentive to the small fractures of human relations, the choices that accumulate into regret, and the difficulty of naming desire after years of suppression. 

Her writing style is introspective and measured, with a delicate, almost meditative prose that mirrors Fuyuko’s inner world. Through her characters, she offers subtle insight into contemporary Japanese psyche, particularly the tension between individual longing and the unspoken expectations that shape adulthood.

This underlying social commentary, especially around womanhood and what it means to be a woman in Japan, echoes Kawakami’s wider body of work and feels unmistakably her own.

Fuyuko emerges as a study in the search for meaning in our modern world with its strict benchmarks for life, intimacy and personal progress. 

The novel’s deliberate pacing may test readers accustomed to momentum or plot-driven storytelling. Little happens in the conventional sense, and that sustained inward focus may not suit every reader.

Yet for those willing to linger, “All the Lovers in the Night” offers a space to sit with the beauty of precise, thoughtful writing.