The Tale of Genji
by Murasaki Shikibu
Should I read this?
appears in About Japan and Fiction.
Completed in the early 11th century, The Tale of Genji is considered the supreme masterpiece of Japanese prose literature, and one of the world's earliest novels. A work of great length, it comprises six parts, the first part of which (also called The Tale of Genji) is reprinted here. The exact origins of this remarkable saga of the nobility of Hei...
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Why recommended
appears in About Japan and Fiction.
Recommendation Signals
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Not sure if this is the right fit?
Consider Pachinko by Min Jin Lee. Recommended by 11 sources.
“Begins close to Sunja’s life and then stretches across generations to track a Korean family living in Japan, alternating intimate domestic scenes with broader historical pressures. Its useful part is the sustained emotional accumulation: small acts of endurance and sacrifice pile up into a textured portrait of belonging, exile, and family duty. Its main limitation is scope and pacing—repeated setbacks and many named characters can feel relentless, and long historical stretches slow the momentum for readers who want tighter plotting.”
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The Tale of Genji
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