The Outsider: The Life and Work of Lafcadio Hearn
By (Author) Steve Kemme
Foreword by Bon Koizumi
Tuttle Publishing
Tuttle Publishing
12th September 2023
United States
General
Non Fiction
895.4
Hardback
272
Width 130mm, Height 203mm
454g
Born in Greece and abandoned as a child, Lafcadio Hearn lived the life of an exile. He travelled the world and became a famous writer but always felt like an outsider in Dublin, London, Cincinnati, New Orleans, and French-speaking Martinique. To him, none of these places felt like home.
Hearn's life in America was punctuated by a string of successes and failures. In Cincinnati he became the city's best-known crime reporter but was fired after marrying a black woman. Devastated, he moved to New Orleans, where he championed French Creole and Caribbean culture in pieces for Harper's and Scribners--and created a new image for the city as a place of voodoo and debauchery (the image which many Americans still hold today as a result).
Hearn arrived in Japan at a time of historic change. Sent there as a correspondent for Harper's, his commission was soon terminated over a dispute about pay. Alone and jobless, he settled in the remote town of Matsue, firmly believing that Japan would provide him with an endless supply of rich writing material--perhaps enough to last a lifetime. And he was right!
Over the next dozen years, Hearn published 15 books which were lauded by the likes of Mark Twain, William Butler Yeats, Albert Einstein and Charlie Chaplin. Hearn's books on Japan made him famous as the leading writer on Japan and Japanese culture--a position he still occupies today.
This book recounts the many colourful episodes in Hearn's life including:
Author Steve Kemme is president of the Lafcadio Hearn Society/USA and a leading expert on Hearn's life and writings. This book includes a foreword by Bon Koizumi, Hearn's great-grandson and director of the Lafcadio Hearn Memorial Museum in Matsue, Japan, along with 30 family images which portray the pivotal people and places in Hearn's amazing life.
'Lafcadio Hearn understands contemporary Japan better, and makes us understand it better than any other writer, because he loves it better.' Basil Hall Chamberlain
"My passion for Japan began with Lafcadio Hearn." --Henry Miller
"Hearn's writing was not only true on the surface but in depth; not only to his conscious thinking but also to the submerged feelings that gave their rhythms to his proseLong before coming to Japan he had shown an instinct for finding in legends the permanent archetypes of human experience--that is the secret of their power to move us--and he later proved that he knew which tales to choose and which details to emphasize, in exactly the right English." --Malcolm Cowley
"I had read a book about Japan by Lafcadio Hearn, and what he wrote about Japanese culture and their theatre aroused my desire to go there." --Charlie Chaplin
Steve Kemme is president of the Lafcadio Hearn Society/USA and a former reporter for the Cincinnati Enquirer, where Hearn formerly worked. He is a member of the Japan Research Center of Greater Cincinnati and has spoken at Hearn symposiums worldwide.
Bon Koizumi is Lafcadio Hearn's great-grandson. He is a professor at the University of Shimane Junior College and director of the Lafcadio Hearn Memorial Museum in Matsue, which is housed in Hearn's first home in Japan.