Confessions of a Mask CoverISBN 978-0-7206-1285-1
Fiction
paperback
£11.95
April


Confessions of a Mask

Yukio Mishima

Translated from the Japanese by Meredith Weatherby

This autobiographical novel, regarded as Mishima’s finest book, is the haunting story of a Japanese boy’s development toward a homosexual identity during and after the Second World War.

Detailing his progress from an isolated childhood through adolescence to manhood, including an abortive love affair with a classmate’s sister, it reports the inner life of a boy’s preoccupation with death. This fourth reprint attests to the power of the novel’s enduring themes of fantasy, despair and alienation.

‘A terrific and astringent beauty . . . a work of art’ — Times Literary Supplement

'Mishima is lucid in the midst of emotional confusion, funny in the midst of despair. His book has made me understand how it feels to be Japanese.' – Christopher Isherwood

'Never has a "confession" been freer from self-pity or over-indulgence.' – Sunday Times

 

YUKIO MISHIMA was born in Tokyo in 1925 and was educated at the Peer’s School, where he received a special commendation from the Emperor of Japan. His international reputation as a leading Japanese writer was firmly established by the English publication in 1960 of Confessions of a Mask, considered to be one of the most important novels to have emerged from Japan since the war. In 1970 Mishima publicly committed seppuku, ritual suicide by disembowellment, in an ultimate gesture towards fulfilling his own fantasy of death.