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The Tale of Murasaki by Liza Dalby
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The Tale of Murasaki: A Novel

by Liza Dalby

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634127,287 (3.81)18
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Anchor (2001), Paperback, 448 pages

Member:ihilani2000
Collections:Your libraryRating:***1/2
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Thoroughly enjoyable; you get a real flavor of the Japanese literature. The language catches the rhythm and cadence of Murasaki. ( )
  jillmwo | Jun 2, 2009 |
This is a fictionalized biography of Lady Murasaki Shikibu, the author of the world's first novel, [The Tale of Genji]. While Dalby is obviously very knowledgeable about Heian Japan and Murasaki's writings, I found this book oddly flat and a bit tedious. Perhaps it's because I have read quite a bit of literature from the period and have been fascinated with Heian Japan, that I find a modern historical novel somewhat lacking. It's probably a very good gateway into the courtly world of Murasaki and 11th century Japan for anyone not very familiar with the customs or the literature. However, given the choice, I would definitely recommend reading The Tale of Genji and experiencing the beautifully ephemeral otherness of that world over The Tale of Murasaki. ( )
  janeajones | May 27, 2009 |
I really liked this book. I have always been fascinated by Japanese culture and a friend actually recommended this to me. ( )
  luvthe88and9 | Apr 1, 2009 |
As a period piece, this is a very interesting book to read. Dalby obviously has the enthusiasm and the background to make this read like an authentic recreation of Heian Japan (though this is neither a place nor a time that I know much about, so perhaps this was a false impression!), and it's a world that comes to life through her crisp, clear prose. Unfortunately, her attention to detail does mean that the book as a story lags a little—a little too much showing, not telling. ( )
  siriaeve | Mar 18, 2009 |
I continue to read and re-read this ever 3 or 4 months. The fragrant and melancholy atmosphere of Heian Nobility is perfectly captured and a impossibly alien culture becomes approachable and understandable. The story is captivating and the setting is more so. Reading this is like taking a vacation and leaves one strangely suprised with the modern world when one looks up fromt he page. I recommend this to anyone who wants a refreshing change from mainstream historical fiction. ( )
  dhelmen | Feb 19, 2009 |
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I was pregnant with you when my mother died, but my condition was far from normal.
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Liza Dalby

Murasaki Shikibu

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0385497954, Paperback)

Liza Dalby's novel is a brilliantly imagined chronicle of the 11th-century Japanese writer Murasaki Shikibu. As we soon discover, our narrator has a good many doubts about the writing life. "As I pondered this question of how to be a success at court," she muses, "I came to the conclusion that literary ambition was more likely than not to bring a woman to a bad end." Happily, the real-life Murasaki persisted, and went on to become the author of the world's first novel, The Tale of Genji. For The Tale of Murasaki, Dalby draws on this groundbreaking masterpiece and on the surviving fragments of Murasaki's own diary and poetry, along with another masterpiece of the Heian period, The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon. The result is a vivid and emotionally detailed portrait of an intelligent, sensitive, and complex woman.

In Dalby's novel, Murasaki writes her first stories about Prince Genji's amorous encounters in order to entertain her friends, and to express her own creative temperament. As the stories gain a wider public, however, they are transformed into a conduit for observations on the mores and intrigues of court life. And in the end, as the narrator struggles to stay true to her literary vision, her tales are inflected by Buddhist thought and become parables on the transience and beauty of the world:

I have always felt compelled to set down a vision of things I have heard and seen. Life itself has never been enough. It only became real for me when I fashioned it into stories. Yet, somehow, despite all I've written, the true nature of things I've tried to grasp in my fiction still manages to drift through the words and sit, like little piles of dust, between the lines.
Dalby is an anthropologist by trade, who has produced two previous nonfiction studies: Kimono and Geisha. And given that her research for Geisha gained her the distinction of being the only Westerner ever to have trained in that much misunderstood profession, it's no surprise that she is able to reconstruct 11th-century Japan with meticulous fidelity. It's all there--the political and sexual machinations, the preoccupations with clothing and custom, the difficult and tenuous position of courtiers, the intensity of female friendships in a male-dominated society--and the author shows us precisely how Murasaki's sensibilities were shaped by the culture in which she lived. This is a rich and convincing debut, and another chapter in the current resurrection of the historical novel. --Burhan Tufail

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)

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