"An evening of conversation with translator Sam Bett and novelist Gabriel Bump as they explore the surprising common ground between translation and fiction writing.


 


Sam Bett, a UMass Amherst alumnus who majored in Japanese and English, is one of the leading translators of Japanese literature working today. His recent translation of Akira Otani's The Night of Baba Yaga made history as the first Japanese mystery novel to receive the Crime Writers' Association Dagger Award (2025), and earned Bett the Commissioner for Cultural Affairs Award from the Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs for his contributions to promoting Japanese culture abroad.


 


Gabriel Bump is the author of Everywhere You Don't Belong, a New York Times Notable Book of 2020, and The New Naturals, a notable book of 2023 in the Washington Post, Boston Globe, and New York Times. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Best American Short Stories, among other publications. The third novel, Don't Stop Snowing, is forthcoming from Algonquin Books.


 


Together, Bett and Bump will reflect on how translation and fiction, while distinct literary acts, are deeply intertwined practices. Both translators and fiction writers are often asked the same underlying question — whether the work is "faithful" to reality or to the original — but as Bett puts it, the more interesting question is not if but how: how a novel plays with biography and history, and how a translation engages with its source text.


 


This event is free and open to the public, co-sponsored by the English Department and the Japanese Program. A book signing and sale will follow, with books provided by Bookends of Florence.


 


East Asian Languages and Cultures


440 Herter Hall


161 Presidents Drive


Amherst, MA 01003


(413) 545-0886


office@asianlan.umass.edu"


https://www.umass.edu/east-asia/events/novel-languages-conversation-about-translating-and-fiction


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