Kokoro

Kokoro

by SosekiNatsume (Author), EdwinMcClellan (Translator), Natsume Soseki (Author), Damian Flanagan (Author)

Synopsis

A young student makes himself the acolyte of an old man he calls 'Sensei'. Bitter, cynical and indolent, Sensei has withdrawn from society. The young student is at once attracted by these qualities and also deeply puzzled. Not even Sensei's wife knows the source of his inconsolable heart. As their friendship grows, the young student becomes more intrigued by the secrets that haunt Sensei, the mysteries of his past that have compromised his relationship with the world. Kokoro, meaning heart in Japanese, is a meditation on the part played by honour, friendship, love and death in Japanese culture. Beautifully written by Japan's preeminent author Natsume Soseki, and profoundly absorbing, it is also a sly subversion of all of these things. Kokoro joins the UNESCO Collection of Representative Works, which include The Gate , The Tower of London and the The Three-Cornered World from Peter Owen Publishers as part of an international programme to bring one of Japan's best known authors to a new English speaking audience. Natsume Soseki's importance to Japanese literature can be compared to that of Dickens to Britain or Henry James to America. Like these writers, his work now holds a hugely popular and important place in the literary imagination of his country. Unlike them, his work is only recently coming to the attention of readers from overseas. As Damian Flanagan says in his new critical introduction Kokoro is the Soseki novel that has been given most attention by critics and the public in Japan.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Edition: 2nd Revised edition
Publisher: Peter Owen Ltd
Published: 06 Feb 2007

ISBN 10: 0720612977
ISBN 13: 9780720612974

Media Reviews
'A brilliant piece of narrative ... Kokoro is exactly what you would ask a novel to be ... its effect is so fresh, so particular to itself ... There is no more exhilarating experience than this sort of discovery ...Soseki manipulates every detail with the same thrilling mastery.' - Spectator; 'Sparsely populated, simple but perfect ...it is a melancholy but stoical study in lonliness, guilt and self hatred ... recalls Turgenev both in its economy and perfect symmetry of architecture.' - Sunday Telegraph; 'Great sensitivity and insight' - Sunday Times; 'A fascinating book, written with the most beautiful lucidity: it is subtle, nostalgic and persuasive.' - Scotsman
Author Bio
NATSUME SOSEKI (1867-1916) is one of the great writers of the modern world. Educated at Tokyo Imperial University, he was sent to England in 1900 as a government scholar. As one of the first Japanese writers to be influenced by Western culture, his various works are read by virtually all Japanese, and contemporary authors in Japan continue to be influenced by his uvre.