Dolce Bellezza hosted her 19th Japanese Literature Challenge last month. Once I have written this post it will be the 54th book in this year’s event. Amazing.
The book is Yasunari Kawabata’s The Sound of the Mountain
(1954, serialized 1949-54). The sound of
the mountain is a foreboding of death.
The novel is about an old man, Shingo, and his midlife crisis. His friends are dying, his two adult children
are running into marital difficulties, and he begins having vivid dreams. The old man is in his early sixties, employed,
healthy, sexually interested, if vaguely and politely so, in his daughter-in-law. Not so old is what I am saying.
Life and events are the ordinary kind. Melodrama is minimized. The novel was serialized over five years,
which fits the pace of the story perfectly, although I fear I would have had
trouble remembering who was who. Typical
events of daily life are mixed with more symbolically meaningful material.
So Kawabata gives us, for example, a page of tedious chatter:
“No, please.” He came out on the veranda. “Shouldn’t you be in bed?”
“I was about to change his diaper.”
“Fusako?”
“She’s gone to the post office with Satoko.” (170)
Etc., including weather small talk. But then a pair of American military planes
fly past. “They did not see the planes, but great shadows passed over the slope”
(171) which leads to thoughts and talk of air raids and how children
experienced the war, rather more poignant stuff, before returning to the
trivia. This is from a longer section
titled “The Kite’s House,” which features the spring return of a kite to the
house. The same kite as previous
years? A descendant? Is the kite returning to Shingo’s house, or
does Shingo live in the kite’s house?
All of this, as is the entire novel, from Shingo’s point of view.
In a sense this is really a novel about how Shingo creates
meaning from the world around him.
He began to feel that there was some sort of special little world apart over behind the shrubbery. The butterfly wings beyond the leaves of the bush clover seemed to him extraordinarily beautiful. (29)
Then on the next page he has one of his vivid dreams, this
time about noodles.
Here are a couple of lines from different dreams.
The American government designated the beard a national monument; and so he could not of his own free will cut or dress it. (205)
From his body they took a great bucketful of mosquitoes. (238)
The style of the novel is generally quite plain, plainer
than Snow Country (1948), but the frequent dreams add a level of
weirdness to the prose.
To my tastes, I would like more of that, and still find
Kawabata’s early, fragmented, Modernist The Scarlet Gang of Asakusa
(1930) his most interesting book. But
the dreams shake things up.
The Japanese context has its own interest, the occasional
post-war intrusions, for example. If the
novel were about Shingo’s son it would be about the way the war and combat
affected him, but the subject is kept at a distance. The forthrightness about suicide always makes
my eyes pop. “’A man can always find
another woman to commit suicide with him’” (245) – this is said matter-of-factly
by Shingo’s sensible wife, about their son-in-law.
Maybe next year I will try to find a Japanese novel that is
more formally or linguistically unusual.
I do not know what that might be.
Any recommendations are welcome.
Thanks, Meredith!
The only Kawabata I've read is The Master of Go. A plain style, yes - plainer than I would normally enjoy, but quite well suited to the book, I thought. If it had been longer, perhaps the plainness would have bothered me more.
ReplyDeleteAs for The Sound of the Mountain, the film version by Mikio Naruse is very good, though not on the level of Naruse's greatest works. As I commented on another blog a while ago, Kawabata must be one of the authors best served by cinematic adaptation - a remarkable number of highly reputed films based on his works.
Oh no, as much as I thought that the daughter-in-law's part was perfect for Setsuko Hara, it did not occur to me to see if she had played that exact part for someone other than Ozu. Many thanks for the pointer.
ReplyDeleteKawabata has a good sense of suitable length. The Sound of a Mountain is perhaps a bit long for what it is doing - long among Kawabata novels - but not long as a serial. I do wonder what the serial experience was like, how these episodes worked for readers over the course of years.
I've just read Wildcat Dome which was an extraordinary story, deeply moving, throught-provoking and written in an unusual way, if that helps :-)
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