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Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission
Title: Spring Snow
Title: Spring Snow
Series:
Sea of Fertility #1
Author:
Yukio Mishima
Rating:
2 of 5 Stars
Genre:
Japanese Lit
Pages:
399
Format:
Digital Edition
Synopsis: |
Kiyoaki, son of a wealthy samurai family, has been raised in the Ayakura household. The Ayakuras are an ancient royal family and the Matsugae's hope that some of the Ayakura's polish will rub off on Kiyoaki.
The Ayakura's have a daughter who is in
love with Kiyoaki. However, Kiyoaki is the forerunner of the
emo-goths and so self-absorbed that he ignores or repels anything
having to do with anyone else. He rejects Satoko's love and she is
then affianced to a direct descendant of the Emperor.
Kiyoaki loses it, starts a torrid
affair with Satoko without thinking about any of the consequences.
Satoko becomes pregnant, is forced to abort the baby and in response
joins a nunnery. Kiyoaki refuses to believe that Satoko would spurn
him and in the process of trying to get her attention, catches
pneunomia and dies.
My Thoughts: |
Ugh. And that
pretty much sums up every single feeling I had about this book. It
was “Literature” with a Capital L.
It was beautifully
written and the translator did a fantastic job of keeping that beauty
intact. However, nothing could disguise the pathetic, childish,
self-centered, disgusting character of the main character. Kiyoaki
was a typical young man but without getting any of his sharp corners
ground down by his parents or his friends. So at the end, he cracks
and breaks.
This was reading
about the worst of people, just because the author felt like writing
it. In the introduction, by the publishers, they give a little
history of the author. He killed himself at the age of 45. If his
mindset continued like this book, it's no wonder.
This was supposed
to be a tetralogy, but I'm not sure how this can be a series since
the main character dies. From the tone of the book, I'd guess that
the series is all tied together by some esoteric “Idea”. Ugh.
Again.
I will NOT be reading any more by Mishima.
★★☆☆☆
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