Prolific, award-winning translator of classical and modern Japanese
poetry Hiroaki Sato recorded his thoughts on American society in mainly
two columns across 30-plus years, collected here for the first time.
This anthology of over 60 of Sato's commentaries reflect the writer's
wide-ranging erudition and his unsentimental views of both his native
Japan and his adopted American homeland. Broadly he looks at the Pacific
War and its aftermath and at war (and our love of it) in general, at the
quirks and curiosities of the natural world exhibited by birds and other
creatures, at friends and mentors who surprised and inspired, and
finally at other writers and their works, many of them familiar-the
Beats and John Ashbery, for example, and Mishima--but many others whose
introduction is welcome.
Sato is neither cheerleader nor angry expatriate. Remarkably clear-eyed
and engaged with American culture, he is in the business of critical
appraisal and translation, of taking words seriously, and of observing
how well others write and speak to convey their own truths and
ambitions.