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Death in Midsummer and Other Stories:Death in Midsummer; Three Million Yen; Thermos Flasks; the Priest of Shiga Temple and His Love; the Seven ... Clothes (Penguin Modern Classics Fiction)
  
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Death in Midsummer and Other Stories:Death in Midsummer; Three Million Yen; Thermos Flasks; the Priest of Shiga Temple and His Love; the Seven ... Clothes (Penguin Modern Classics Fiction) [Unknown Binding]

Yukio Mishima
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Unknown Binding: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Books (31 Aug 2000)
  • ISBN-10: 0141184531
  • ISBN-13: 978-0141184531
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,488,548 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Yukio Mishima
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The old world meets the new in this collection of fiction and drama. A husband prepares to commit hara-kiri in the name of patriotism, an ascetic struggles with temptation, and a businessman meets a past love in the streets of San Francisco. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Dr. Delvis Memphistopheles TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Ready to reappraise after a fifteen year lay off I returned to
"Patriotism", ready to wield the critical sword of cynicism on Mishima reification. The catalyst for the return was reading Nathan and Stokes biographies then Ross's journey.

Emerging, after diving into the Mishima oceanic psychological depths are new poetic insights. A man who potholed into the dark abyss of his childhood despair, kept in the hot fetid stifling air of a Grandmother's psychological withering grasp, his bounteous imagination filled spaces, gaps and cranies. Most people would descend into revenge or self destruction. Mishima ingested all these elements, creating a body without organs, eventually splicing himself to visually note his own mortality. In the meantime he mined, forged and beat out on the anvil of his soul intricate poetic psychological insights.

The stories are pathological masterwerks, the double bind of patriotism. Joining his friends entails damnation as a traitor, if he kills them he sentences himself. Doing nothing he becomes anhilated by all. One escape from the double bind is to spill himself, a poetic revenge on the situation entailing his obliteration.

Enticing the beauty of his wife, making her watch whilst he disgorges himself, Mishima inhabits the psychological vortex of a codependent serial killer. Deft applied psychological warfare destroys his wife, the intoxication of desire. Dutifully she stabs herself in the neck.

A metaphor for self destructive relationships couched in beauty. The text hints she was chosen for this deed from inception. Whilst Mishima always stated he could never write without experiencing the act, here he seemingly rehearses his own death. Famous for his nihilism, having it all, beautiful wife, two children feted by the right, a literary giant, the man of film, the embodiment of masculinity he stuck a finger into all belief, throwing his life into the abyss screaming "Is this all?" whilst the world scratched his herd like head.

The monk who falls for the concubine incorporate deceit, power, elusion, beauty, lust and immersion in the songs and sounds of the universe.A beautiful story of subterfuge and boredom, the metaphor for having it all and still never being fulfilled. Maybe life in the next world is better?

The death of the beach is excrucating in detail. Anyone who has suffered any form of bereavement will be hit by a brick wall of recognition. This is a beautiful haunting story that stayed with me for weeks.

The game playing of the party spinsters is another precise vignette as the relationships rock to the need to keep and sustain face.

This book is bite sized chunks of the Mishima mind, the correct preparation for the wider works, psychological distillations. He bestrode the extremities of a man wishing to find his own contours. There is nothing oriental about his genius, only the adherents who have thwarted their imagination or lack the life experience see him as essential Japanese.

In essence Mishima speaks to the world holding a mirror to falsity he abhorred. Just a pity about the politics.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
I bought this book after seeing a documentary on Mishima and thinking that he seemed like an interesting fellow. However I could not have been more stunned by the quality of the stories within - a snapshot of an world alien to most Europeans, but expressed so beautifully.

Mishima writes about a lot of heavy things - his account of a suicide pact between a young army officer and his wife, in which he describes the act of seppuku (hari-kiri) almost as an act of love, is quite stunning. He also has a witty, flippant turn and an eye for tragi-comedy, mixing tales of infant death on a beach with a story of geishas going for a walk. All of these are beautifully expressed and sometimes like reading poetry as much as prose.

Mishima's recurrent themes are of beauty, honour and a lost world of chivalry of Japan's Samurai traditions, themes echoed in his turbulent life and final death by ritual disembowelment in the office of a Japanese army general. His writings are edged with his displeasure at his own physical appearance and lack of strength - which he later tried to address with kendo, karate and bodybuilding, seeing himself as one of the warrior tradition; his obsession with male beauty and form, and the images of the death of St Sebastian, pierced by arrows by the Romans suggest a homo-erotic under-current to some of his tales.

His writing is achingly beautiful in places - my only ache at the moment is having lent my copy to someone who has not yet returned it!

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Amazon.com:  12 reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Very impressive 14 Dec 2002
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
A friend recommended Mishima to me, and this was the book I picked up. First, to respond to a reviewer below, this book (at least my copy) has no introduction, no preface, no afterward, and has numerous translators. The stories were selected by Mishima himself, and the book was published in New York. Reading any "leftist" intentions on the part of the publishers of this book, then, is certainly very strange, unless it was gleaned from the three paragraph synopsis on the back.

That having been said, I was immensley impressed by this book. After the first three stories ("Death in Midsummer", "Three Million Yen", and "Thermos Bottle") I was ready to admit the genius of the author. The title story is abridged, and the translation on all three is awkward -- I don't know a bit of Japanese, but the English itself lacked lucidity and had some confused grammar. Nevertheless, there's a remarkable detail to the deliniation of character, a mesmorizing lyrical style, and a powerful look into the psychology of man when confronted with tragic and absurd circumstances. The stories, also, are brilliantly subtle satires of middle class values. The author clearly intends to show the decline in the Japanese character as a result of Westernization and modernization. At some points it hints at leftist values -- a dislike of the bourgeois, a sympathy for the poor, etc. But Mishima's strange and anachronistic political beliefs show us that his work is best read as insight into the identity crisis facing modern Japan, and not as leftist, or even entirely rightist. (I read, while glancing through a biography of the author, a statement he made after speaking to a group of leftist students. He said something to the effect of "We shared a friendship and an understanding, embracing through a barbed fence...")

As much as I appreciated the first three stories, however, I found the rest of the book to be much better, revealing an incredible diversity of style and theme. "The Priest and His Love" is a beautiful Buddhist fable exploring the paradox and power of beauty and sensuality. The style of writing reminded me a lot of Pär Lagerkvist. "Patriotism" caught me completely off-guard, and undoubtedly represents the greatest work in the book. Its the story of an officer who commits seppuku (ritual suicide) and his wife, who follows. With great fluidity and poetic grace, Mishima describes their final night together, then, in a frustratingly objective prose, describes the morbid end of the two. Violence and sensuality are tied in with finality, duty and beauty. Mishima was an aesthete, but of the rarest kind -- much in the spirit of Poe, perhaps. The story had an enormous impact of me.

"Dojoji," auspiciously set after "Patriotism," is one of Mishima's Noh plays, and shifts entirely to the languid, allegorical style that characterizes the Noh (contrasted by the turbulent, grotesque realism of the previous story). The play is about the auction of a giant wardrobe that has a gruesome past. Mishima's attempt to reinvigorate the tired Noh theatre was a noble effort, and (in my opinion) a successful one. The spiritual quality of the theatre proves a profound vehicle to the pessimism and spiritual despondency that characterizes modern literature and thought. After reading this play, I went out immediately and found a copy of "Five No Plays by Mishima" which I very much look forward to reading. The next story, "Onnagata," deliberately takes us to the other side of Japanese theatre, the kabuki. Its a homoerotic tale of obsession and infatuation, and a love triangle between three men (or rather, two men and an onnagata -- a man who plays, or rather lives, as a woman in kabuki theatre). One man seeks the elusive love of a famed onnagata by joining the kabuki theatre. The onnagata, for Mishima, is "the illicit child born of a marriage between dream and reality." As infatuation drives him further and further into the world of the kabuki, it has the strange effect of driving him further and further away from the onnagata's love, who, in the end, falls in love with a pretentious young guest director who knows nothing of the kabuki.

"The Pearl" completely surprised me. Of all things, its a social comedy, the type I had suspected, from reading the other stories, that the author was incapable of. To my delight, I was proved wrong. Again poking tremendous fun at the middle class, the story is about five middle aged women, and a lost pearl and a silly mischevious act that explodes into a tale of deciet, head games, and irony.

After reading this, I am a confirmed Mishima fan. It has also excited me into exploring contemporary Japanese literature. Very highly recommended!

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
A great collection 23 Sep 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I stumbled onto Mishima accidentally but he's fantastic. All these stories are written simply but beautifully, with not a single excess word, and deal with everything from patriotism, homosexuality, suicide, death, love, materialism, and dreams. Top stories? Definitely "Death in Midsummer" and "Seven Bridges", but most importantly, "Patriotism", a completely disturbing, beautiful and unforgettable work.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
mishima at his best 2 Mar 1999
By vic spicer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
this personally selected collection of short stories shows mishima at his best. from a surreal no play to gentle stories of mourning and loss, this is all great stuff which translated beautifully. my only reservation would be the story "patriotism", which details the ritual suicide of a young couple- ick. compelling, but not for the weak stomached.
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