The first novel in Mishima's masterful Sea of Fertility tetraology
Yukio Mishima was born into a samurai family and imbued with the code of complete control over mind and body, and loyalty to the Emperor - the same code that produced the austerity and self-sacrifice of Zen. He wrote countless stories and thirty-three plays, in some of which he performed. Several films have been made from his novels, including The Sound of Waves, Enjo which was based on The Temple of the Golden Pavilion and The Sailor Who Fell From Grace with the Sea. Among his other works are the novels Confessions of a Mask and Thirst for Love and the short story collections Death in Midsummer and Acts of Worship. The Sea of Fertility tetralogy, however, is his masterpiece. After Mishima conceived the idea of The Sea of Fertility in 1964, he frequently said he would die when it was completed. On 25 November 1970, the day he completed The Decay of the Angel, the last novel of the cycle, Mishima committed seppuku (ritual suicide) at the age of forty-five.
Romantic obsession and sexual intrigue meet in the sumptuous
historical melodrama
*Variety*
Mishima is the Japanese Hemingway
*Life magazine*
This tetralogy is considered one of Yukio Mishima's greatest works.
It could also be considered a catalogue of Mishima's obsessions
with death, sexuality and the samurai ethic. Spanning much of the
20th century, the tetralogy begins in 1912 when Shigekuni Honda is
a young man and ends in the 1960s with Honda old and unable to
distinguish reality from illusion. En route, the books chronicle
the changes in Japan that meant the devaluation of the samurai
tradition and the waning of the aristocracy.
*Washington Post*
Mishima's novels exude a monstrous and compulsive weirdness, and
seem to take place in a kind of purgatory for the depraved
Perfect beauty…. A classic of Japanese literature
*Chicago Sun-Times*
Mishima was one of literature’s great romantics, a tragedian with a
heroic sensibility, an intellectual, an esthete, a man steeped in
Western letters who toward the end of his life became a militant
Japanese nationalist
*New York Times*
We read Spring Snow for its marvelous incidentals, graphic and
philosophic, and for its scene-gazing, in whose emotional alliance
with nature...Mishima remains most consistently Japanese
*New York Times*
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