East Wind Melts the Ice

East Wind Melts the Ice

by Liza Dalby (Author)

Synopsis

In this collection of essays, Liza Dalby takes the 72 seasonal units of an ancient Chinese almanac as seeds, and grows them into a year's journal, entwining personal experience, natural phenomena, and ruminations on the cultural aesthetics of China, Japan, and California. Written from Dalby's perspective as an anthropologist and gardener, the essays explore how the Asian calendar has grounded her awareness of time and place. Drawing connections between philology and nature, memory and experience, they draw on her experiences over the years she spent in Japan where she first went to live at age 16. She also conducted fieldwork on a tiny island in the Inland sea, worked as the only non-Japanese geisha, and painted her teeth black to recreate the courtly fashions of the eleventh century. The essays also delve into memories of keeping a pet butterfly, roasting rice cakes with her children, watching whales, and pampering worms to make compost. In the manner of the Japanese personal poetic essay form, together they comprise 72 windows into a life lived between cultures, resulting in a dazzling and down-to-earth mosaic-like memoir.

$35.23

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Publisher: Chatto & Windus
Published: 05 Apr 2007

ISBN 10: 0701181044
ISBN 13: 9780701181048
Book Overview: By the author of the bestselling Geisha and Take of Murasaki, a record of nature, passing seasons and a memoir, this beautiful journal of a year is a window into gardening - eastern and western -, Japanese customs and a life lived between two cultures.

Author Bio
Liza Dalby is an anthropologist specialising in Japanese culture and the only Westerner to have become a geisha. She is the author of Tale of Murasaki and was a consultant on Rob Marshall's film of Memoirs of a Geisha. She lives in California with her husband and three children.