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Bookbot

Meredith McKinney

    A Tale Unasked
    A cup of sake beneath the cherry trees
    Three Japanese Buddhist Monks
    The Three-Cornered World
    White-haired Melody
    • White-haired Melody

      • 275 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      A novel serialized between 1994 and 1996 that evokes Japan in the 1990s. The narrator and two men in their fifties share their experiences of war and its aftermath. A fourth character enters the narrative, whose memories are marked by collective and familial catastrophes: the deaths of loved ones, railway and aviation accidents.

      White-haired Melody
      4.2
    • In The Three-Cornered World , an artist leaves city life to wander in the mountains on a quest to stimulate his artistic endeavors. When he finds himself staying at an almost deserted inn, he becomes obsessed with the beautiful and strange daughter of the innkeeper, who is rumored to have abandoned her husband and fallen in love with a priest at a nearby temple. Haunted by her aura of mystery and tragedy, he wants to paint her. As he struggles to complete his picture and sove the enigma of her life, his daily conversations with those at the inn and the village provide clues and inspiration toward solving the mysteries she presents. Natsume Soseki examines each event and scene in this story in minute detail, creating balanced pictures in each small situation. Interspersed with philosophies of both the East and West, Soseki's writing blends two very different cultures and presents the unique world of an artist struggling with his craft and his environment. An evocative picture of the daily life in a mountain village of the times, The Three-Cornered World provokes thought and images equally.

      The Three-Cornered World
      4.0
    • Three Japanese Buddhist Monks

      • 112 pages
      • 4 hours of reading

      A guiding light amid the world's chaos and a manual for rejecting materialism, in the form of writings by Japanese Buddhist monks These simple, inspiring writings by three medieval Buddhist monks offer peace and wisdom amid the world's uncertainties, and are an invitation to relinquish earthly desires and instead taste life in the moment. Throughout history, some books have changed the world. They have transformed the way we see ourselves - and each other. They have inspired debate, dissent, war and revolution. They have enlightened, outraged, provoked and comforted. They have enriched lives--and upended them. Now Penguin brings you a new set of the acclaimed Great Ideas, a curated library of selections from the works of the great thinkers, pioneers, radicals and visionaries whose ideas shook civilization and helped make us who we are.

      Three Japanese Buddhist Monks
      3.8
    • A cup of sake beneath the cherry trees

      • 64 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      Moonlight, spring blossom, a woman's hair - a medieval Japanese monk reflects on idle moments and life's fleeting joys.

      A cup of sake beneath the cherry trees
      3.8
    • A Tale Unasked

      • 336 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      A new translation of Lady Nijo’s diary—one of classical Japan’s greatest literary works A Penguin Classic Lady Nijo’s A Tale Unasked (Towazugatari) is the last, and arguably the finest, among classical Japanese literature’s famous "women’s diaries." Thought to have been completed around 1307, when the author was in her late forties, the first two-thirds of this autobiographical work document in rich and compelling detail the experiences of an imperial concubine whose time at court was ruled and finally ruined by her passionate and complicated love life. The final third of the work equally memorably describes her peripatetic life after the emperor expelled her from the court in her mid-twenties and she became a nun, wandering the roads of Japan as a form of Buddhist austerity. Meredith McKinney's superb translation breathes new life into Lady Nijo's fascinating diaries, which survived her era in a single copy and were rediscovered only in the 1940s.

      A Tale Unasked