Available Formats
The Siren's Lament: Essential Stories
By (Author) Jun'ichiro Tanizaki
Pushkin Press
Pushkin Press Classics
18th November 2025
31st July 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Classic fiction: literary and general
Fiction in translation
895.6344
Paperback
192
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
The sage Confucius visits a cultured duke, whose pursuit of virtue is threatened by the desires of his dazzling, malicious consort. A nave servant elopes with his master's daughter, only to be plunged headlong into a world of murder and corruption. Exhausted by a lifestyle of never-ending debauchery, a young prince finds himself obsessed with a sorrowful, beguiling mermaid.
These three stories, in a gorgeous new translation by Bryan Karetnyk, distil the essence of Jun'ichir Tanizaki's shorter fiction: the commingling of Japanese and Chinese mythologies, the dark side of desire and the paper-thin line between the sublime and the depraved.
'Tanizaki is a monument of 20th-century Japanese literature...these stories...are undiscovered jewels...more of this sort of thing, please.' - Guardian
'One of the greatest Japanese writers... his work explores the destructive power of erotic obsessions' - Guardian
'Junichiro Tanizaki may well prove to be the outstanding Japanese novelist of this century... It is through... detail plain in language, but poetic in conception, that the blood of Tanizakis rich and mysterious art pulses' - Edmund White
'A really great writer' - David Mitchell
'Japans great modern novelist. Tanizaki created a lifelong series of ingenious variations on a dominant theme: the power of love to energize and destroy' - Chicago Tribune
Jun'ichir Tanizaki (1886-1965) is widely considered one of Japan's most important writers. Born in Tokyo to a family of printers, he began his literary career in 1909 and published numerous plays, essays, novels and short stories. His writing is characterised by ironic wit, subtle interpersonal dynamics and charged depictions of sexuality and cultural identity. The Tanizaki Prize, one of Japan's most prestigious awards, is named in his honour.