Paulownia: Seven Stories from Contemporary Japanese Writers
Ōgai Mori
Read by Availle
Paulownia is a collection of seven stories by three Japanese authors from the late 19th and early 20th century.
Mori Ōgai was an army surgeon who was sent to study in Germany, where he developed an interest in Western literature. His most famous work is The Wild Geese (Gan). This collection contains his short stories Takase Bune, Hanako, and The Pier.
Nagai Kafū's writings center mostly around the entertainment districts of Tokyo with their geisha and prostitutes. Here, his stories The bill-collecting and Ukiyo-e are presented.
Shimazaki Tōson was one of the representatives of Japanese naturalism, which we can see in his stories A Domestic Animal and Tsugaru Strait.
Taketomo Torao, the editor and translator of this volume, translated many Western works into Japanese, for example the Rubayat, the Divine Comedy, and works by Shakespeare. He was also a writer in his own right.
(2 hr 25 min)
Chapters
Foreword and Introduction | 13:23 | Read by Availle |
Takase bune by Mori Ōgai | 26:20 | Read by Availle |
Hanako by Mori Ōgai | 14:54 | Read by Availle |
The pier by Mori Ōgai | 12:16 | Read by Availle |
The bill-collecting by Nagai Kafū | 27:23 | Read by Availle |
Ukiyoe by Nagai Kafū | 9:28 | Read by Availle |
A domestic animal by Shimazaki Tōson | 14:18 | Read by Availle |
Tsugaru Strait by Shimazaki Tōson | 27:51 | Read by Availle |
Reviews
Loved it, but be warned there is a recurrent death theme.
A LibriVox Listener
Unknown
Beautiful. I enjoyed each and every story. But Yukio-e was beyond all, not just the poem, but the delicacy the narrator was capable of expressing
FINE WORKS
Mary Ann Mays
Listening to these seemed like listening to prose poems. Simplicity, sensitivity, humanness were the adjectives I apply.
A good listen if interested in multi-generation Japanese culture
DMG
Interesting tales, thank you for reading
Chickadee Yellowfinch