
The Gate
Description
<b>'Soseki is the representative modern Japanese novelist, a figure of truly national stature' Haruki Murakami</b>
<b>'A sensitive, skilfully written novel by the most widely read Japanese author of modern times'<i>Guardian</i></b>
<b>'Soseki's prose is so delicate that each page is like looking at a set of dreamy watercolours'<i>Telegraph</i></b>
Humble clerk Sosuke and his wife Oyone live in a modest house at the bottom of a cliff. Oyone was once married to another man; now her adultery seems to hang over the couple's marriage like a curse. Despite multiple pregnancies, they have no living children; and once affluent, Sosuke finds his income growing ever smaller. They are left with little besides each other and a beautiful painted screen to remind them of better days.
Then a series of crises rocks this shabby but harmonious domestic existence. Sosuke's wastrel brother moves in; the couple find themselves forced to sell the screen to buy winter shoes; and Oyone's ex-husband is rumoured to be visiting a wealthy neighbour at the top of the cliff. Beset by reminders of his flaws and failures, Sosuke runs away to a temple, hoping to escape into enlightenment. But can he learn what the monks have to teach him? Will he return to Oyone changed - at all? One of the great works of the literature of indecision, this is also one of the founding texts of modern Japanese letters.
<b>Part of the Pushkin Press Classics series: timeless storytelling by icons of literature, hand-picked from around the globe. </b>
<b>Translated by Francis Mathy</b>
<b>With an introduction by Damian Flanagan</b>
<b>Natsume Soseki (1867-1916) was one of Japan's most prominent novelists of the Meiji Era. After studying in England on a government scholarship, Soseki taught English literature at Tokyo University, but the immense success of his satirical novel <i>I Am a Cat</i> led to his own career as a writer. A highly influential figure viewed as the father of modern Japanese letters, from 1984 until 2004 his portrait appeared on the front of the Japanese 1,000-yen note. Pushkin Press publishes several of his major novels, including <i>Kokoro</i> and <i>The Three-Cornered World</i>. </b>
Reviews / Votes
Soseki is the representative modern Japanese novelist, a figure of truly national stature * Haruki Murakami * A sensitive, skilfully written novel by the most widely read Japanese author of modern times * Guardian * Soseki's prose is so delicate that each page is like looking at a set of dreamy watercolours * Telegraph * The Gate is not so much tragic or comic as a graceful balance between the dispiriting and the humorous... A masterpiece of taste and clarity. Francis Mathy's translation must be warmly commended * New Statesman *More details
Persons
Content
Natsume Soseki: A Brief Biography XXXVii
the gate 1
Glossary 223
Select Biographies 226