A stunning new English translation--the first in more than forty
years--of a major novel by the father of modern Japanese fiction
Natsume Soseki's Kusamakura--meaning "grass pillow"--follows its
nameless young artist-narrator on a meandering walking tour of the
mountains. At the inn at a hot spring resort, he has a series of
mysterious encounters with Nami, the lovely young daughter of the
establishment. Nami, or "beauty," is the center of this elegant novel,
the still point around which the artist moves and the enigmatic subject
of Soseki's word painting. In the author's words, Kusamakura is "a
haiku-style novel, that lives through beauty." Written at a time when
Japan was opening its doors to the rest of the world, Kusamakura turns
inward, to the pristine mountain idyll and the taciturn lyricism of its
courtship scenes, enshrining the essence of old Japan in a work of
enchanting literary nostalgia.