Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things

Published
Nov 1904
Main Genre
Fantasy Fantasy
Rating
Pages
76

About This Book

On Japanese Pronunciation Although simplified, the following general rules will help the reader unfamiliar with Japanese to come close enough to Japanese pronunciation. There are five vowels: a (as in fAther), i (as in machIne), u (as in fOOl), e (as in fEllow), and o (as in mOle). Although certain vowels become nearly "silent" in some environments, this phenomenon can be safely ignored for the purpose at hand. Consonants roughly approximate their corresponding sounds in English, except for r, which is actually somewhere between r and l (this is why the Japanese have trouble distinguishing between English r and l), and f, which is much closer to h. The spelling "KWAIDAN" is based on premodern Japanese pronunciation; when Hearn came to Japan, the orthography reflecting this pronunciation was still in use. In modern Japanese the word is pronounced KAIDAN. There are many ellipses in the text. Hearn often used them in this book; they do not represent omissions by the digitizer. Author's original notes are in brackets, those by the digitizer are in parentheses. Diacritical marks in the original are absent from this digitized version.

Genres & Themes

Subgenres

Buy This Book

Formats & Editions

Browse the different covers, formats, and publication history for this title.

Paperback

Paperback edition cover
Paperback
First Edition Nov 1904 Createspace ISBN 1519404999
Buy

eBook

eBook edition cover
eBook
Mar 2011 Capstone ISBN B004TP8OWS
Buy
eBook edition cover
eBook
Oct 2016 ISBN B01LWSR83R
Buy

Audio

Audio edition cover
Audible
Mar 2021 -- Not Selected ISBN B08ZQBTYCT
Buy