Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 3rd March 2000
Paperback
Published: 3rd December 2019
Hardback
Published: 16th July 2024
The Sailor who Fell from Grace with the Sea: Vintage Quarterbound Classics
By (Author) Yukio Mishima
Vintage Publishing
Vintage Classics
16th July 2024
4th April 2024
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Narrative theme: Interior life
Narrative theme: Love and relationships
Fiction in translation
895.635
Hardback
144
Width 128mm, Height 200mm, Spine 16mm
220g
VINTAGE QUARTERBOUND CLASSICS- Bound to be beautiful A beautiful hardback edition of a great Japanese classic, beautiful, lyrical and deeply ominous. A band of savage thirteen-year-old boys reject the adult world as illusory, hypocritical, and sentimental, and train themselves in a brutal callousness they call 'objectivity'. When the mother of one of them begins an affair with a ship's officer, he and his friends idealise the man at first; but it is not long before they conclude that he is in fact soft and romantic. They regard this disillusionment as an act of betrayal on his part - and the retribution is deliberate and horrifying. 'Mishima's greatest novel, and one of the greatest of the past century' The Times VINTAGE QUARTERBOUND CLASSICS- Bound to be beautiful
Yukio Mishima was born into a samurai family and imbued with the code of complete control over mind and body, and loyalty to the Emperor - the same code that produced the austerity and self-sacrifice of Zen. He wrote countless short stories and thirty-three plays, in some of which he acted. Several films have been made from his novels, including The Sound of Waves; Enjo, which was based on The Temple of the Golden Pavilion; and The Sailor Who Fell From Grace with the Sea. Among his other works are the novels Confessions of a Mask and Thirst For Love and the short-story collections Death in Midsummer and Acts of Worship. The Sea of Fertility tetralogy, however, is his masterpiece. After Mishima conceived the idea of The Sea of Fertility in 1964, he frequently said he would die when it was completed. On November 25th, 1970, the day he completed The Decay of the Angel, the last novel of the cycle, Mishima committed seppuku (ritual suicide) at the age of forty-five.