No Longer Human: (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)
About
Through three confessional notebooks, Ōba Yōzō recounts a life of performance — smiling, charming, playing the clown to hide a terror of human connection so profound it has consumed his identity entirely. He drinks, he drifts between women, he attempts suicide. Each failure to connect deepens the conviction that he is fundamentally different from other people — not better or worse, but categorically other. Osamu Dazai's autobiographical novel is Japanese literature's most unflinching portrait of alienation — a book that makes Camus seem well-adjusted by comparison. Yōzō's voice is simultaneously pitiable and magnetic, his self-destruction documented with a clarity that borders on the clinical. A novel that names the specific loneliness of someone who has spent their entire life pretending to be human — and the devastating moment when the pretense collapses.



