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Palm Of The Hand Stories
(Yasunari Kawabata)

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The 'Palm-of-the-Hand' stories, most of which are just 2-4

pages long, are set against a backdrop of day-to-day

Japanese life in cities, small towns and the

countryside.



Each story is a miniature gem, rich in poetic imagery

and concocted with an economy of words that does not

detract from Kawabata's natural art of storytelling.



Included in the collection is a heavily abridged version

of Snow Country, one of the novels that Kawabata is best

known for and which contributed to his becoming the

first Japanese recipient of the Nobel prize for

literature.



The simplicity of Kawabata's construction belies the

complexity of each story, be it about love or death,

time or loneliness.



It is as if Kawabata has taken a longer story and

dissected away all extraneous detail without diluting

the power of his message or the appeal of its

presentation.



Generally profound, and at times surreal, haunting,

amusing or disturbing, the Palm-of-the-Hand stories

represent a diverse description of miniature scenes:

interactions between lovers, sensations of loss or

longing, or ruminations on the pursuit of happiness.



The 70 stories collected here span 50 years of output

from 1923 to 1972 and thus reflect the considerable

changes in Japan during this period. On rare occasions

it seems that the translation may have failed to convey

the true spirit of the story. Perhaps this perception

arises because some stories will, necessarily, have

reduced impact outside of the cultural crucible of

Japan.



Nonetheless, these are a minority and remain interesting

for the very same reason that they are not entirely

clear.



The remainder have an impact disproportionate to their

length.



A true master of his craft, Kawabata?s descriptive

narrative and realistic characterisation are capable of

provoking emotional reaction in spite of the shortness

of his tales.



Few writers are capable of saying so much in pieces

of such brevity. These short and bittersweet portraits

of Japanese life are sublime.



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