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Fumiko Enchi

    2 de octubre de 1905 – 12 de noviembre de 1986

    Fumiko Enchi, nombre de pluma de Fumiko Ueda, fue una dramaturga y novelista japonesa del período Shōwa. Su temprana exposición a diversas literaturas y la introducción a obras clásicas japonesas por parte de su abuela moldearon profundamente su voz literaria. Inspirada por las tradiciones teatrales y una fascinación por el esteticismo, Enchi creó narrativas que profundizan en complejas relaciones humanas y profundidades psicológicas. Su escritura une el patrimonio literario clásico japonés con una sensibilidad marcadamente moderna.

    Masks
    The waiting years
    • The waiting years

      • 204 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      Published for the first time in the UK, one of Japan's greatest modern female writers In the late nineteenth century, Tomo, the faithful wife of a government official, is sent to Tokyo, where a heartbreaking task is awaiting her. From among hundreds of geishas and daughters offered up for sale by their families she must select a respectable young girl to become her husband's new lover. Externally calm, but torn apart inside, Tomo dutifully begins the search for an official mistress. The Waiting Years was awarded Japan's most prestigious literary award, the Noma Prize.

      The waiting years
    • Masks

      • 156 páginas
      • 6 horas de lectura

      'Clear and powerful' (Kirkus), Masks is perhaps Fumiko Enchi's finest work and her first to be translated into English. In this stunning and subtle novel about seduction and infidelity in latter-day Japan and about the destructive force of feminine jealousy and resentment, Mieko Togano, a handsome and cultivated woman in her 50s, manipulates--for her own bizarre purposes--the relationship between her widowed daughter-in-law, Yasuko, and the two men in love with her.

      Masks