Life of a Counterfeiter
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- USD 11.99
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- USD 11.99
Descripción editorial
A master forger lives in obscurity and disappointment, oppressed by the shadow of the artist whose work he copies. Unglamorous, unadorned lives such as this form the focus of Yasushi Inoue's tenderly observed, elegantly distilled short stories - two of which are appearing in English for the first time. With a haunting emotional intensity, they offer glimpses of love lost and lives wasted.
These three luminous, compassionate tales showcase the mastery and exquisite talent of one of Japan's most beloved writers.
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The three powerful stories collected here were written by Inoue in the years following WWII, giving readers a nuanced glimpse of the postwar psyche. The title story is a masterly meditation on fate and obscurity. A journalist who has been comissioned to write the biography of the great artist Keigaku is drawn into the story of Keigaku's most sucessful counterfeiter, Hara Hosen. WWII acts as a framework for the journalist's own life, and readers track the subtle change in his perception of the world and Hosen through the blithe pre-war years, the grim descent to surrender, and the difficult years that followed. In "Reeds," the narrator uses three vivid childhood memories to ponder the intersection of memory and perception. How can a single moment hold so much weight, while the adults involved in the memory have no recollection of the scene? In "Mr. Goodall's Gloves," the same narrator thinks back on his great-grandfather's mistress, Grandma Kano, who raised him. He remembers her kindness fondly, but his reflection is colored by the awareness that her lowly status as a mistress in a morally strict environment must have made for an isolated life. Inoue's prose is simple without being austere, a perfect vehicle for these beautiful stories full of pathos for those lonely souls who live in the shadows. This haunting, elegiac trio makes clear Inoue's position as a Japanese literary master.