Jackson Alone: From the winner of the Akutagawa Prize

Author:   Jose Ando ,  Kalau Almony
Publisher:   Bonnier Books Ltd
ISBN:  

9781804442838


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   15 January 2026
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Jackson Alone: From the winner of the Akutagawa Prize


Overview

A short, blistering gut punch of a novel, Jackson Alone is at turns satirical and deadpan, angry and tender - a frank exploration of identity, race, and queerness in contemporary Japan. Nobody at the corporate offices of Athletius Japan knows much about the massage therapist, Jackson, but rumors abound. He used to work as a model. He likes to party. He's mixed race: half-Japanese, half-somewhere-in-Africa-n. He might be gay. Fueling the gossip is the sudden appearance of a violent pornographic video featuring a man who looks like a lot like Jackson. When Jackson serendipitously meets three other queer mixed-race guys, he learns he's not the only one being targeted. Together they concoct a plan: find out who's responsible and, in the meantime, exploit the fact that nobody can seem to tell them apart to trick people who've wronged them. From an Akutagawa prize winning author, Jackson Alone asks complex questions about how we see ourselves and how we see others, as well as what it really means to get revenge.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jose Ando ,  Kalau Almony
Publisher:   Bonnier Books Ltd
Imprint:   Footnote Press Ltd
Dimensions:   Width: 14.40cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.60cm
Weight:   0.270kg
ISBN:  

9781804442838


ISBN 10:   1804442836
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   15 January 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Heartbreaking, hilarious, and harrowing, Jose Ando's Jackson Alone astounds. Investigating queerness, Blackness, and difference in a vibrant, ever-shifting Tokyo, Ando's novel blends buddy-comedy, whodunit and cultural excavation into a story about the many different ways we belong (and don't). I've never read anything like Ando's prose-Jackson Alone transcends the form -- Bryan Washington, author of MEMORIAL A unique idea, it reminds me of the work of Jordan Peele -- Amy Yamada The harmony that Jackson Alone finds between a pressing social theme and rhythmical narration filled me with a strange excitement I had never before experienced -- Yoko Ogawa The rhythm of Jose Ando's Jackson Alone is wonderful, as is the richly forceful premise -- Hiromi Kawakami Skewering the horrors of corporate work and living with the internet, Jackson Alone is a propulsive exploration of doppelgängers, revenge, obsession and queer community, and how race and desire can become dangerously entangled. Twisty and subversive - I've never read anything like it. -- Jenna Clake


A unique idea, it reminds me of the work of Jordan Peele -- Amy Yamada The harmony that Jackson Alone finds between a pressing social theme and rhythmical narration filled me with a strange excitement I had never before experienced -- Yoko Ogawa The rhythm of Jose Ando's Jackson Alone is wonderful, as is the richly forceful premise -- Hiromi Kawakami I tip my hat to Jackson Alone. The novel depicts characters belonging to multiple minority groups, a presence only now beginning to be recognized in Japanese society, and does so with a tremendous perceptiveness rooted in the micro level of everyday experience. Its critique holds the power to topple like a row of dominoes the long chain of discrimination stretching through all forms of expressive activity, including literature, each discovery of prejudice exposing another. -- Keiichiro Hirano The image of a member of a minority group, so often forced into isolation, increasing by one, two, three, many, is radical. I read in this work a challenge to the public's frustration with minorities, the very people who it should protect. It seemed to be saying, 'We're going to keep increasing. How many more until you try and seal us away again?' -- Shuichi Yoshida


Author Information

Jose Ando (Author) Jose Ando was born and raised in Tokyo and is of African-Asian heritage. His debut novel Jackson Alone was awarded the 59th Bungei Prize. It was also shortlisted for the Akutagawa Prize, as was his second novel The Camouflaged Man. His third novel Dtopia won the 172nd Akutagawa Prize, solidifying his presence as one of Japan's brightest young literary stars. Kalau Almony (Translator) Kalau Almony is a Japanese-English literary translator based in Kawasaki, Japan and a 2025 National Endowment for the Arts translation fellow. Born and raised in Kailua, Hawai?i, Kalau completed his BA in Comparative Literature at Brown University and MA in East Asian Languages and Literatures at the University of Hawai?i at Manoa.

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Latest Reading Guide

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