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Spring Snow

By: Yukio Mishima
Narrated by: Brian Nishii
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Publisher's summary

The first novel of Mishima's landmark tetralogy, The Sea of Fertility.

Spring Snow is set in Tokyo in 1912, when the hermetic world of the ancient aristocracy is being breached for the first time by outsiders -- rich provincial families unburdened by tradition, whose money and vitality make them formidable contenders for social and political power. Among this rising new elite are the ambitious Matsugae, whose son has been raised in a family of the waning aristocracy, the elegant and attenuated Ayakura. Coming of age, he is caught up in the tensions between old and new -- fiercely loving and hating the exquisite, spirited Ayakura Satoko. He suffers in psychic paralysis until the shock of her engagement to a royal prince shows him the magnitude of his passion, and leads to a love affair that is as doomed as it was inevitable.

©1972 Copyright 1972 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Originally published in Japan as Haru no Yuki by Shinchosha Company, Tokyo, in 1968. c. 1968 by Yukio Mishima (P)2010 Audible, Inc
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Critic reviews

"[The Sea of Fertility] is a literary legacy on the scale of Proust's." ( National Review)
"Mishima is like Stendhal in his precise psychological analyses, like Dostoevsky in his explorations of darkly destructive personalities." ( Christian Science Monitor)

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What listeners say about Spring Snow

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    5 out of 5 stars

The perfect way to start a series

Having studied Mishima's works I can't recommend this book and its sequel enough. They can be read in either order and be just as impactful. The ending of the Sea of fertility might be a bit rushed, but, the first two books are a must for anyone who desires a taste of Japanese classics.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Basically over analysing the character's pysche

Very cool and entertaining although some of the religious stuff felt a bit out of place at times

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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A beautiful work

The story is a little slow but a beautiful work overall. This is a 4 part series yet only one of the books is on audible which kinda sucks.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Exquisite

I read the plot with my "junk eye", the same eye with with I watch WWE wrestling, and loved the story. The main thing for me though was Mishima's exquisite language paragraph after paragraph that never lost freshness for me. I thought the numerous metaphors (could be similes because I've never been clear about the difference) were stunning and extremely effective in creating pictures in my mind.

I did though, tire of the insufferable parts of main boy's personality and behavior, the shallowness of other characters. In spite of this, Mishima's language was so lyrical that it effortlessly carried me through the entire long story. I really did enjoy this novel. Narrator Brian Nishii was excellent again.

Though some may find this novel dry and slow, many will likely find it fascinating, exhilarating, stunning and wonderful.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

best of the trilogy but a bit overrated

there is a lot of hype that one must deal with when choosing to read Mishima...for a while it was simply trendy to carry around one of his books. Some of his books are so loopy that permission to translate them has never been given even after all these decades...

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

melting snow

Nice glimpse into time gone by in the mystic Japan. Nice dramatic performance of the narrator when representing different characters of the story.

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Mishima was a genius. Really had a head on his shoulders!

I love this narrator with Mishimas work. I have the sound of waves that they did as well. Highly enjoyed both. PLEASE DO MORE MISHIMA!

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Cliche if it wasn’t from the 60s

So it’s cliche, and predictable as can be. The biggest twist was how things happened not that they happened. There’s basically two stories going on, one that’s about a dumb boy falling love with a girl after many many opportunities to say hey like love her before she’s engaged with the prince but does not and so it’s a lot of pinning and destroying his family, her family, and their lives.

Story two is a bunch of philosophy. Ranges from post war politics, Buddhist philosophy, and perception on time. This was the bit I really enjoyed but sadly as the story gets rolling this part takes a big back seat leaving me with a quite boring main story that all I wanted was it to end.

So if you like predictable court dramas set in the Meiji era, check it out. If you like philosophy maybe plan to space out during large chunks of book.

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2 people found this helpful

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An extraordinary work.......

Wonderful and lyrical. With a canvas as broad as Mishima's hero Thomas Mann and writing as lyrical as Rilke. Very impressive.

Mishima who performed the ritual Seppukku on the afternoon of Nov 25, 1970, sealed and posted to his publisher the manuscript of The Sea of Fertility, a tetralogy of novels over which he had labored for five years. Unfortunately his magnum opus has always been occluded by his suicide. The four books – Spring Snow, Runaway Horses, The Temple of Dawn and The Decay of the Angel – are a saga of 20th-century Japan: a story of national decline that nonetheless proposes redemption through the endurance of a certain soul, forceful enough to be reborn ad-infinitum.

Spring Snow (volume 1 of this tetralogy) is set in 1912 and has shades of Lampedusa's-The Leopard). The main characters of this book are capricious Kiyoaki Matsugae, a baron's son of distant samurai descent, his friend Shigekuni Honda and Kiyoaki's love Satoko Ayakura.

The extraordinary beauty of this book lies in Mishima's intense portrayal of Kiyoaki as a dreamer, gripped by the sense that life's elusive fineness is slipping away by the second and longing to chase the impossible, to "bend the world" into the shape of his ideals. Of course tragedy is not far behind.

The narrator has done his job deftly.
I hope Audible will consider bringing out volumes 2, 3 and 4 of this transcendental work.

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14 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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really a 3.5

Very dry for, I'd say, about the first 3/4s of the duration. Once it escapes the moody emotional introspection of its very juvenile protagonist, however, it does become very dramatically compelling. I was fully engrossed for the final act. It is a long journey into the mind of an altogether unimpressive person. The redeeming beacon of the story is that the author (I think) is aware of this and driving towards an actual point. The reader is not meant to actually respect the protagonist. At least I hope not. Then again, who knows? The author did essentially do, in his own life, pretty much the same thing that his character does, and for obliquely similar reasons. Maybe he was, at bottom, just as self-absorbed and angst ridden as his character? Tough call.

At any rate, I chose this book because I wanted to explore Japanese literature and, through this lens, Japanese culture. On this front, I was definitely not disappointed. It is a very aesthetically beautiful and culturally rich book. Ultimately, I'm glad I spent the time. I will probably end up finishing the trilogy at some point. I would recommend it.

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