Nowadays Japan is seen as a modern and technologically innovative place,
but in 1913, when Myths and Legends of Japan was first published, its
culture seemed strange and exotic to the average Westerner. With this
collection, F. Hadland Davis uses folklore to bring Japanese
civilization to life and introduce this alien society to a Western
audience. Davis arranges myths into 31 categories, including heroes and
warriors, legends of Mount Fuji, animal legends, superstitions, and
legends of the sea. Each chapter contains numerous examples of the
genre, making for a volume packed with stories that will entertain both
the Japan enthusiast and the mythology buff. FREDERICK HADLAND DAVIS is
also the author of The Persian Mystics: Jalalu'd-Din Rumi (1907) and The
Persian Mystics: Jami (1908), both available from Cosimo.