In the pantheon of minimalist literature, Marie Kondo is the gentle cheerleader, and Joshua Becker is the pragmatic pastor. But Fumio Sasaki is the ascetic. His 2015 manifesto, Goodbye, Things: The New Japanese Minimalism , isn’t a book about pretty, Instagram-friendly shelves. It is a psychological scalpel. And in its audiobook form, translated by Eriko Sugita and narrated by Brian Nishii, that scalpel finds its most potent edge.
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Hearing this chapter is particularly unnerving because you are, at that very moment, using a digital device to listen. The audiobook forces a meta-awareness that the print version cannot. As Nishii reads Sasaki’s advice to delete everything “just in case,” you feel a twitch in your thumb. You want to pause the Audible app, open your photo library, and start swiping. That friction—between consumption and action—is the entire point. No format is perfect. Sasaki’s book includes lists: “55 Rules for Letting Go,” “15 Things to Notice When You Let Go,” “12 Things I Realized After Letting Go.” In print, these are handy bullet points you can bookmark. In audio, they blur together. You will likely find yourself shouting, “Wait, what was rule number 42?” as you fumble for the rewind button. goodbye things fumio sasaki audiobook
The audiobook of Goodbye, Things is not a how-to guide. It is a confession you are invited to eavesdrop on. And by the final chapter—when Sasaki admits he still sometimes buys things he doesn’t need, and that the struggle is eternal—Nishii’s voice softens. You realize that minimalism isn’t about zero possessions. It’s about noticing the weight of each one. In the pantheon of minimalist literature, Marie Kondo
Furthermore, Sasaki is a Japanese minimalist writing for a Japanese audience, and some cultural specifics (the size of Tokyo apartments, the omnipresence of mold due to humidity) require attention. Nishii’s narration handles the translation gracefully, but occasionally, the rhythm of translated sentences feels more formal than conversational. Ultimately, listening to Goodbye, Things is a different act than reading it. Reading is a task you check off a list. Listening, especially to a book like this, is a ritual. It is a psychological scalpel