The Tale of Genji

Front Cover
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, Jun 16, 1990 - Fiction - 384 pages
In the eleventh century Murasaki Shikibu, a lady in the Heian court of Japan, wrote the world's first novel. But The Tale of Genji is no mere artifact. It is, rather, a lively and astonishingly nuanced portrait of a refined society where every dalliance is an act of political consequence, a play of characters whose inner lives are as rich and changeable as those imagined by Proust. Chief of these is "the shining Genji," the son of the emperor and a man whose passionate impulses create great turmoil in his world and very nearly destroy him. This edition, recognized as the finest version in English, contains a dozen chapters from early in the book, carefully chosen by the translator, Edward G. Seidensticker, with an introduction explaining the selection. It is illustrated throughout with woodcuts from a seventeenth-century edition.
 

Contents

PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS I
1
1 The Paulownia Court
3
2 Evening Faces
28
Lavender
65
4 An Autumn Excursion
107
5 The Festival of the Cherry Blossoms
134
6 Heartvine
146
7 The Sacred Tree
186
The Orange Blossoms
231
9 Suma
236
Akashi
279
Channel Buoys
316
A Picture Contest
345
Copyright

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About the author (1990)

Murasaki Shikibu, a lady in the Heian court of Japan, is best known as the author of The Tale of Genjiwritten in the eleventh century and universally recognized as the greatest masterpiece of Japanese prose narrative and possibly the earliest true novel in the history of the world.

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