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review 2014-10-26 04:06
The Wild Geese by Mori Ōgai
The Wild Geese - Ōgai Mori,Kingo Ochiai,Sanford Goldstein

 

Mori Ōgai co-mingles nostalgia for a vanished Tokyo of the late 1900's with romanticism as he tells the story of secret longing, isolation, and unrequited love. The main character, Otama, is the subject of pathos in this Meiji- period story: a naïve heroine left with gloomy prospects after her divorce from a bigamist policeman, succumbs to filial duty to her impoverished father by becoming the mistress of a sleazy moneylender.

 

Her patron, Suezo, while shrewdly building a business on the exploitation of others, compares typically to most Meiji-men: selfish, egotistic. Already married, he secretly sets up Otama in a residence where she wiles away her days like a lonely bird in a gilded cage.

 

The story of Otama is told in flashback through the narration of a keen observer - a friend of the male protagonist, Okada, a medical student pursuing plans to study in Germany, with ill- managed finances that force him to seek the services of the calculating moneylender. During one of her days often filled with boredom, Otama takes notice of, and becomes infatuated with the handsome medical student as he passes by her balcony. Their meeting develops into unfulfilling entanglements for all.

 

Ōgai vividly details everyday life in the village from shopkeepers, street performers, housemaids, geisha, and policemen to university students and their landladies: giving a strong impression of a transitioning Japan moving into the 20th century; though his characterization of women seem less than flattering, possibly suggesting once more, a distinctive Meiji societal attitude. For example, Otama early in the story is depicted with a flaccid personality, weak and too easily compromised to be completely sympathetic to the modern reader. Suezo, on the other hand, adulterous, serpentine and slithering; unlikable from the beginning, describes his wife as 'ugly and quarrelsome.'

 

Ōgai's imagery may seem clumsy or indelicate in areas as noted in the scene where Okada accidentally kills a wild goose.

 

Among these bitumen-colored stems and over the dark gray surface of the water reflecting faint lights, we saw a dozen wild geese slowly moving back and forth. Some rested motionless on the water.

"Can you throw that far with a stone?" Ishihara asked, turning to Okada.

Okada hesitated. "They're going to sleep, aren't they? It's cruel to throw at them... I'll make them fly away," said Okada, reluctantly picking up a stone.

The small stone hissed faintly through the air. I watched where it landed, and I saw the neck of a goose drop down. At the same time a few flapped their wings and, uttering cries, dispersed and glided over the water . But they did not rise high into the air. The one that was hit remained where it was.(111)

 

The image of the dead goose linked with Otama's fate is just one of several less subtle scenes, branding the story in general with a fable-like signature.

Not all wild geese can fly.

 

The Wild Geese was my first Mori Ōgai novel; a quick read at 119 pages, I have to admit that it didn't impress me as a 'classic' piece of Japanese literature. It truly leaned more to a charming fable whose heroine disregards the coveted riches of golden eggs, and finds freedom in the spreading of her own wings.

 

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review 2014-06-06 13:21
[REVIEW] Otoko Benten Enbun Roku by Youka Nitta

Otoko Benten Enbun RokuOtoko Benten Enbun Roku by Youka Nitta
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Read on June 06, 2014

 

 


Nitta sensei's art never fail to enthrall me.





The storyline is pretty interesting. A foreigner was mesmerized by the beauty of an androgynous youth who was prostituting himself on the street. Little does he knows, said youth was more than what was perceived on the outside. Looks can deceive especially for a young virile man yet to learn the pleasure of the same-sex.

The sex scenes in it was absolutely scorching hot! As usual, Nitta sensei's works has the best sex scenes. She always delivers when it comes to smex.




* Reviewed on June 6th, 2014

*:--☆--:*:--☆:*:--☆--:*:--☆--:*:--☆--:*:--☆:*:--☆--:*:--☆--:*



View all my reviews

Source: www.goodreads.com/review/show/959426092
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review 2012-12-06 00:00
Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 1 - Nobuhiro Watsuki
I've been a fan of the Rurouni Kenshin anime since I first saw it countless years ago on Toonami, on Cartoon Network. Back then, still a kid, barely a teenager, I fell in love with the man known as Himura Kenshin. He was a man that would forever change my life and continue to influence the type of people I admired in this world. Being able to come back now, and humbly read this comedic, playful, serious, gentle, badass, kickass, threatening, beautiful, engaging story is like coming up close and personal with a superstar that you always loved and admired from a distance, and are now able to meet face to face for the first time and speak with.

Reading just the first manga doesn't take anything away from the characters. If anything, it has only served to make each of them more personal, and open up more of who they are to me.

If you have never read this manga, I advise you to give it a chance, no matter whether you're into time period pieces, into samurai and the Japanese setting so common in manga and anime, or whether you've ever experienced a manga at all. This is one that has comedy, tragedy, romance, badassery, and more. You have an entire map of emotions and experiences you'll get to enjoy--

--and it all starts with a wandering, former samurai and assassin named Kenshin.

He's based off of a real man who fought to bring revolution, and in this story, he ceased fighting for an unknown reason, before reappearing nearly a decade later, after his name had become legend, only to step into the lives of average people trying to find their way in this era stuck between the way of the samurai and the new government that is continuously being abused by men with power and cunning, able to use the confusion to their advantage. He is kind and seemingly ridiculous at first sight, but when trouble truly arises and he cannot but unsheath his blade to fight-- he becomes an incredible force. A man who can knock down many opponents with the Hiten Mitsurugi Style, without killing a single one. He is a living contradiction, and though he wanders without intending to root himself to a single spot, he fights for those who need his aid. And in the process, they learn from him-- a girl of 17, a young boy of 10, and soon more to come. He faces each challenge with calmness and control, and does what he must to put others in their place when they threaten innocents with their abused power.

It's a story of redemption and respect, with mirth and joy mixed in to make it an enjoyable blend for anyone. It's a story anyone should give a try. The very first volume will show you what type of characters these people are, will reveal to you who they are, even if you do not know all of their story yet. It's a series that is incredibly honest with you, and makes no attempts at hoodwinking, but rather calls out the jerks and bad guys for what they do. It's one of the most open and forward series you'll ever come across, and it's well worth the read.

100% give this one your attention. You won't regret it.
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review 2012-08-14 00:00
Rurouni Kenshin: Meiji Swordsman Romantic Story v. 1 (Rurouni Kenshin (Paperback))
Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 1 - Nobuhiro Watsuki This is some serious quality manga right here, shonen at its finest. This is a story about war, people, love, second chances, regrets and trying to move on from the pain of losing everything. This is a pretty dramatic manga, Kenshin is a man (yes, a man not a teenager) full of regrets after having gone through the revolution that usher Japan into the Meiji era (heh, and here my mom, I was in my teens when I first read it, said you didn't learn anything while reading manga but I learn Japanese history right here) and after the war he is spent, his hands covered in blood in his efforts to bring about a better future for the people. But ten years have pass and his past is still chasing him and he finds himself asking the question if his stance to never kill again is feasible if he wants to protect the people he has come to love and all the people he wants to protect in order to atone for his sins. Really deep stuff right here, I recommend you read it if you have a thing for samurai's, quiet relationship that are all about gestures and characters that redeem themselves in heart wrenching ways.
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review 2012-02-12 00:00
Rurouni Kenshin: Meiji Swordsman Romantic Story, Vol. 1
Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 1 - Nobuhiro Watsuki Very good start to the series, and I'm definitely looking forward to starting volume 2.
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