Tap cover to enlarge

Late Chrysanthemum: Twenty-One Stories from the Japanese

Published
Jun 1986
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Pages
178

About This Book

This collection of Japanese short stories reveals a rapidly changing Japanese society and the deep draw of its traditional culture.

The first half of this century saw the coming of age of the Japanese short story. Influenced by Western literary techniques, such innovative writers as Shiga Naoya, Ozaki Shiro, Yasunari Kawabata, Shimaki Kensaku, Hayashi Fumiko, Dazai Osamu, and (somewhat later) Kobo Abe reassessed the Japanese story tradition and brought new vigor to the uniquely Japanese sense of the detail and natural context of everyday life.

The works of these writers stand at the center of modern Japan's literary development. Despite their differences, it is the simplicity and purity of their natural images-sultry late-summer days, cicadas, lizards, and the sounds of life's routines-that more than anything anchor the emotions and perceptions of their stories.

For A Late Chrysanthemum, translator and editor Lane Dunlop has selected twenty-one stories by these seven intriguing and influential authors to convey the depth and range of the modern Japanese story, a discriminating selection which, in Dunlop's sure and masterful English renderings, won this book the Japan-United States Friendship Award for Literary Translation.

Genres & Themes

Buy This Book

Formats & Editions

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

Hardcover

Hardcover edition cover
Hardcover
First Edition Jun 1986 Farrar, Straus and Giroux ISBN 0865472297
Buy

eBook

eBook edition cover
eBook
Feb 2016 Tuttle Publishing ISBN 1462918115
Buy
eBook edition cover
eBook
Feb 2016 Tuttle Publishing ISBN B01BO2ISIS
Buy