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Oscar Benl

    Essays in Idleness
    Der Kirschblütenzweig
    Flüchtiges leben
    Japanische Geisteswelt
    Der Kirschblütenzweig
    The Tale of Genji
    • The Tale of Genji

      • 1090 pages
      • 39 hours of reading

      In the eleventh century Murasaki Shikibu, a lady in the Heian court of Japan, wrote the world's first novel. But The Tale of Genji is no mere artifact. It is, rather, a lively and astonishingly nuanced portrait of a refined society where every dalliance is an act of political consequence, a play of characters whose inner lives are as rich and changeable as those imagined by Proust. Chief of these is "the shining Genji," the son of the emperor and a man whose passionate impulses create great turmoil in his world and very nearly destroy him. This edition, recognized as the finest version in English, contains a dozen chapters from early in the book, carefully chosen by the translator, Edward G. Seidensticker, with an introduction explaining the selection. It is illustrated throughout with woodcuts from a seventeenth-century edition.

      The Tale of Genji
      3.7
    • Essays in Idleness

      • 224 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Offers two works on life's fleeting pleasures by Buddhist monks from medieval Japan, but each shows a different world-view. This book includes ribald stories of drunken monks to aching nostalgia for the fading traditions of the Japanese court.

      Essays in Idleness
      4.0