Saturday, April 3, 2010

My Reading List (Part 1) : Great Impressions

I finally did it - I wrote up my fleeting impressions of the best books I have read to date (4/3/2010).  All of these books have left some indelible impression on me - they speak to 10th through 17th century  Japanese masterworks of haiku, waka, renga, haiga, landscape painting, calligraphy, and more.

Each book title is a link (blue and underlined) that will transport you to a web site containing all details about the authors, publishers, translators, and more.  Please read on!


My Reading List.
These are books I have read, or at least skimmed since I began writing this blog.  I have been loaned nearly all of these books by university libraries and museums from all across the country.

I recommend reading nearly all of the books in this list; I haven’t listed the books that I didn’t care for, only the ones I benefited from.  Some of these books are truly wonderful as they are enlightening and beautiful!


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TITLE


1


I enjoyed this book.

It Includes bios of Busōn and his disciples, their origins, influences and, most interesting of all their personalities and hardships.

Paintings of Busōn's are compared side-by-side with paintings of his disciples and similarities and differences in composition are explained.

Good book for understanding style development and composition, brushstroke by brushstroke.

Almost no poetry – this is primarily a study of painting techniques.

I wish the pictures were in color, they were mostly somewhat grainy black and white photos of the paintings.  I will need much more time to read and re-read this book.


2


I enjoyed this book too.  

It has a very good haiga analysis which vastly expanded my knowledge of haiga. 

Picture plates were probably adequate, but I wish they had been of a better quality.


3


I enjoyed this small book.  I will probably buy this book just for its intro.

The best part of the book was its 33 page introduction.  It discusses the development of waka/ renga / haikai and includes a few truly great, pre-Bashō poems.

I really did not enjoy the “travel sketches”, but they are famous prose-poems so…  (Update 11/27/2010 - I have since found a different translation of some passages and did very much enjoy them).

Just for the record, the travel sketches are:

The Records of a Weather-Exposed Skeleton
A Visit to the Kashina Shrine
The Records of a Travel-Worn Satchel
A Visit to Sarashina Village

Don’t expect pics, there are none – this book is dedicated to prose poetry. 

The book has three (3) small maps of Bashō’s travels.  The maps were an unexpected surprise to me as I had been dreaming of my own possible pilgrimage, in the future; re-tracing the countryside paths traveled by Japanese master poets. 

This is kind of exciting since I may decide to repeat one of Bashō’s travels in the future!  Now if I can get a good modern map and learn to use my GPS…. (Update 11/27/2010 - this was over-exuberant dreaming, but who knows...).

The original Japanese text of the poems is not included, only the English translations for prose/ poetry – I prefer to see the original.


4


This is a very, very nice, thin, big book containing color and B&W picture plates.

There are very good analyses/ interpretations of the poetry and paintings (although the discussions are squeezed-in using VERY small letter fonts!).

This book contains some of my favorite haiga such as: Rocks Scattered Here and There, Old Pond, a Su Shih prose poem from Red Cliffs, etc... 


5


Beautiful book.  A must have book.

Everything is great about this book: color plates, discussions, poetry, English/ German translations and original Japanese with calligraphy printed for clear reading.


6


A must read Shinkei reader (compendium).  It contains many Shinkei waka with verse-by-verse interpretations/explanations which are provided by Shinkei, his disciples, and by Esperanza (the book's author).

The book includes many Shinkei hokku, tsukeku, waka, and the two Hyaku Renga poems: Cuckoo and Broken and Beneath the Snow. 


7


Incredibly beautiful 500 page book in English with Japanese.
I can’t say more about this book yet.  I just started to read it and it is so fantastic that my words won’t do it justice (yet).

This book has everything: beautiful high-quality color plates of paintings and calligraphy. Also contains Taiga poetry – English translations only.

Mostly, this book showcases and explains, in detail, the paintings and calligraphy of Ike Taiga and his wife Tokuyama Gyokuran.

The book is providing me with insight into their lives, personalities, and friends’ lives; it discusses their painting and calligraphy techniques as well.


8


Incredibly beautiful book.  I lost my notes for this book, notes I took at the museum library while browsing through it.  I found the one comment I had made though, it said “This is an incredibly beautiful book”. 


9


This is possibly the MOST BEAUTIFUL book I have ever seen.  It is an incredibly beautiful book with oversized, full page, high quality painting plates (and foldouts) of Busōn masterpieces.

Again, I am struck by the awesome beauty of Busōn’s landscapes and I haven’t yet the words to describe how great this book is.

Like most of the other books in this list, I have this book on loan from a University library – of course I must return it in several weeks, but I wish I could buy it for myself. 

This book is written in all Japanese and I have only been able to locate it on the Japanese Amazon.com – unfortunately I can’t read the website well enough to order a copy.  Someday maybe. 


10


In this book, 14th century (?) scholars instruct artists and actors on how to depict various Genji scenes in their future paintings and plays. 

In that way the book seemed unique, but I didn’t appreciate it too much since, the subject of this book really isn't of interest to me (yet).


11


The tale of Genji - by Murasaki Shikibu

a) Royall Tyler's translation was such an unenjoyable read that I almost abandoned Genji altogether. 

Thank goodness I, by pure chance, discovered Seidensticker's  translation very enjoyable; I especially enjoyed the Suma chapter.
Also, I have skimmed Arthur Waley's version  and found passages that were also enjoyable to read..


12


Yosa Busōn  by Kono, Motoaki  (or is it Ksono?)
I really enjoyed browsing this tiny book.  It has beautiful tiny plates; the text is all in Japanese. 

I would love to have this one to travel with always.  But, I could not locate a copy outside of the museum library. 


13


This is another great, small book.  No artwork, but very nicely written to explain Haiku masters lives, styles, and translation methods.  This is another book I could easily see myself traveling with, even backpacking!


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4 comments:

  1. Hello Paul,

    Good work for your book list, I'm sure it might be a great help even for some Japanese who are not so thrilled to read Japanese poems in Japanese ^^, it might sound strange, but we Japanese sometimes find it easier to understnad haiku in English because lots of words in haiku are no more used in daily life.

    I'm super busy now preparing for my daughter's new life, she'll be a high schooler tomorrow, so I'll come again to your blog to read them throughly and I'd like to introduce your blog to my English learning friend. Thank you.

    Enjoy pleasant spring days!

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  2. Hello Nori,

    Thanks for the comment about my book list! You once asked me if I could recommend some haiga books. Well there they are!

    Honestly, I have such an avalance of books in my home's office, all at various stages of reading completion, sticky notes in my favorite passages, that I had to create a list just so I would know which books to request again from the libraries - so many books I need to return so soon.

    About a thousand years ago, I attended High School in the high mountain desert of Arizona. My family and I had just moved there, to a small one-school town away from city life in California.

    My first day in school was as intimidating as it was exciting. Everything I saw was new (to me) - like those first ever impressions you have when young.

    There were new teachers, unfamiliar classrooms, other children, both older and younger, but all curious about what the future would be like that year.

    Anyway, by the time you read this your daughter will have successfully been initiated into her exciting new environment. And in Tokyo!

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  3. Thank you for telling me about this list, Paul! Good to learn about some new books I didn't know, such as 蕪村画譜 / Busōn gafu / Paintings by Yosa Busōn, and 池大雅畫譜 / Ike Taiga gafu ... Keep on the good work! :)

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  4. You're wecome Origa. Those Buson books are fine one's. I found them in the Seattle Art Museum's library during my hunt for Buson art & poetry. I believe they were in the Folio section. It seems they are out-of-print, but my bet is they can still be found. Paul

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