Temple of the golden pavillion was my gateway drug into mishima and in so happy there are more of his writings. I would disagree however, with recommending readers read his masterpieces first though, once atop the mountain, the only path is descent.
@@KyriakosChrisailor who fell from grace with the sea is a good starter and then move onto his masterpieces. It's good enough and gets you used to the style. Tbh do whatever you want, no wrong way to read mishima haha, it's your own journey and experience
@@KyriakosChri I'm starting with Temple of the Golden Pavilion. It seems to me to be a distillation of his main ideas and themes. In addition you have the proximity of WW2, the aftermath of which significantly impacted his views.
Just finished reading the sound of waves, and what a refreshingly straight forward love story. Such a charming book, and it goes to show great authors can absolutely nail the romance genre in a way that has literary value.
It's really good actually. However, everyone has it's own taste. I assume that as Westerner who was influenced by Anglo-American cultural hegemony for my whole life, my taste highly differs from that of Asian people.
Yeah its definitely a good book, it is far from his best but its still written by Mishima. Fun fact is that it was originally serialized in a mens interest magazine called "Playboy" (not the one you're thinking of, the same name but a different magazine).
I read it about a month ago, picking it up randomly at a library and I really liked it. It doesn't take itself too seriously but it's fun and has a lot of WTF moments. There were multiple points where I just thought "What the hell is going on?" Made me lol
Currently half-way through Kinkakuji (Golden Pavilion), my first of his novels (recommended to me by a Japanese friend). Paul Schrader's film introduced me to Mishima and am on a mission to read more. I'm a student of Japanese too, nowhere near skillful yet, but I'm considering buying Kyoko's House in original language and having a few friends help me read it. Great video, thank you, will be adding some on my list to read!
@@ABooktubeChannel I will say, the gall of you to put Life for sale so low on the list! I find that book to just be so much damn fun, one of my favourites!
Just finished my first one. The sailor who fell from grace with the sea. It did have odd pacing but was interesting and woven together nicely. Picking up the temple of the Golden pavilion after watching this.
Great content! Just got through Confessions of a Mask and was left out really inspired by its perspective. Not the same experience as yours, since I've read the portuguese version. One day i'll improve my japanese enough to read Mishima and Terayama in the original language...
I just read Life for Sale, it is the first Mishima I have read (only thing I could find in the bookstores near me). I’m glad to hear that it’s not considered very good, because I’m very disappointed. I’ll shoot for one of his better novels next time.
I've read 9 of these 15 books (currently working on my tenth, Temple of the Golden Dawn), including all of The Sea of Fertility, so I found your ranking very enjoyable. Total Chad move reading the last paragraph of Runaway Horses with no forewarning lol. As can be expected, I have some slight disagreements here and there, but the only major disagreement I have is that Confessions of a Mask is bottom tier for me, I really think Mishima loses a lot of his magic when writing in the first person. His enigmatic and elegant style needs an aloof but sardonic narrator in order to avoid getting simplistic and preachy IMO. Thanks for making this. Also, if you haven't seen it, you should check out the film Thirst for Love (1967) by Koreyoshi Kurahara, featuring a cameo by Mishima. Although it kind of bungles the fire ceremony scene, it's otherwise an incredible and stylish adaptation that really gets Mishima's vibe. Criterion has an English subtitles edition.
Thank you for watching! I wish you good luck in your continued reading of Mishima. Confessions is an interesting outlier here because I believe it's his only "I-novel" but it's also many people's first read. My personal feeling is that he's pretty aloof/sardonic even in the first person! Also thank you for the rec I'll definitely check out that film.
@@ABooktubeChannel I recommend his documentary movie "Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters" The movie is like reading his book with his vibe. The plots and the protagonist is so meticulous work. It showed What's inside his thought.
I have currently two Mishima books at home, Confessions of a Mask and The temple of the golden pavilion. Do you think those are a good start for his literature? I would start with Confessions of a mask, but I don’t know if Temple is too big of a step after that. Would you recommend another book to read after Confessions?
I actually think both are fantastic introductory books. Temple is not difficult to read, so I would just jump right into it. The Sound of the Waves is also a good intro text!
THE SAILOR WHO FELL FROM GRACE WITH THE SEA was made into a movie, reset in England, with Kris Kristopherson and Sara Mills. I love the novel but have no opinion about the movi, which i saw once over 40 years ago, before i read the boook.
the disrespect to forbidden colours which was my first Mishima read and one of my favourite books of all time. Yes, it is long but it so lyrical and the characters are so fleshed out that they feel palpable
Hi im new to reading literature and i found yukio mishima and was interested in reading his books. Which do u think i should start with. I saw some people recommend to start with 'Confessions of a mask'.
Snow in Spring is certainly a masterpiece, the later books in the series I thought got worse and worse; the second was OK at best but didn't really have any outstanding literary quality, the third I thought was bad and the fourth was just forgettable. Confession was well written but I thought the content was despicable, and Sun and Steel just felt cramped and full of self-loathing. I had had it with Mishima by then. Now I am coming back and I'm waiting for Golden Pavilion and Sailor, and the new biography by that Japanese governor.
ive never touched a mishima book before till a couple days ago, im readin forbidden colors n so far i am enjoying it. im barely on chapter 3 mind you so my thoughts so far on it are still in its infancy
Tbh I think sound of the waves is pretty overrated everything about it is pretty simple tho I liked the way he used sea as a literary element i overall think it's pretty cliche-while reading it you know what will happen at the end. It doesn't feel realistic at all and I feel like watching a romance anime while reading it.
Temple of the golden pavillion was my gateway drug into mishima and in so happy there are more of his writings. I would disagree however, with recommending readers read his masterpieces first though, once atop the mountain, the only path is descent.
That's valid, I just don't like that most people are told to start with Confessions. I feel like a lot of readers get turned off by that novel!
So what would you recommend instead?
@@KyriakosChrisailor who fell from grace with the sea is a good starter and then move onto his masterpieces. It's good enough and gets you used to the style. Tbh do whatever you want, no wrong way to read mishima haha, it's your own journey and experience
@@KyriakosChri I'm starting with Temple of the Golden Pavilion. It seems to me to be a distillation of his main ideas and themes. In addition you have the proximity of WW2, the aftermath of which significantly impacted his views.
Just finished reading the sound of waves, and what a refreshingly straight forward love story. Such a charming book, and it goes to show great authors can absolutely nail the romance genre in a way that has literary value.
Absolutely, I always recommend The Sound of Waves, and my friends are never disappointed!
Life for Sale was unexpectedly very fun
It's really good actually. However, everyone has it's own taste. I assume that as Westerner who was influenced by Anglo-American cultural hegemony for my whole life, my taste highly differs from that of Asian people.
Yeah its definitely a good book, it is far from his best but its still written by Mishima. Fun fact is that it was originally serialized in a mens interest magazine called "Playboy" (not the one you're thinking of, the same name but a different magazine).
I read it about a month ago, picking it up randomly at a library and I really liked it. It doesn't take itself too seriously but it's fun and has a lot of WTF moments. There were multiple points where I just thought "What the hell is going on?" Made me lol
@@DoubleJRT It's funny to think it's one of Mishima's last written works before he did his coup and suicide
Excellent analysis. Mishima would be proud.
Thanks for watching!
Currently half-way through Kinkakuji (Golden Pavilion), my first of his novels (recommended to me by a Japanese friend). Paul Schrader's film introduced me to Mishima and am on a mission to read more.
I'm a student of Japanese too, nowhere near skillful yet, but I'm considering buying Kyoko's House in original language and having a few friends help me read it.
Great video, thank you, will be adding some on my list to read!
A wonderful in-depth analysis into a great literary mind. My copy of Spring Snow is now in the mail!
Glad to hear it!
Spring Snow is brilliant, its my personal favorite out of all the others
great video, man! love mishima's work and just getting back into his stuff after deep diving a couple years ago. keep up the good work!
Thank you for watching, and good luck with continuing the reading!
@@ABooktubeChannel I will say, the gall of you to put Life for sale so low on the list! I find that book to just be so much damn fun, one of my favourites!
@@DannyReguinho I guess that's the nature of a tier list - some things need to be on the bottom!
Just finished my first one. The sailor who fell from grace with the sea. It did have odd pacing but was interesting and woven together nicely. Picking up the temple of the Golden pavilion after watching this.
Great content! Just got through Confessions of a Mask and was left out really inspired by its perspective. Not the same experience as yours, since I've read the portuguese version. One day i'll improve my japanese enough to read Mishima and Terayama in the original language...
Great video, just recently got into Mishima. What about patriotism and sun and steel?
So many of his books foreshadow his end. Spring Snow is a beautiful novel
Why no Sun of Steel?
I started with life for sale first and just finished sailor who fell from grace with the sea. I can't wait to read more.
What an amazing project to rank mishima's novels! He is my favourite jap writer by far.
I just read Life for Sale, it is the first Mishima I have read (only thing I could find in the bookstores near me).
I’m glad to hear that it’s not considered very good, because I’m very disappointed. I’ll shoot for one of his better novels next time.
I've read 9 of these 15 books (currently working on my tenth, Temple of the Golden Dawn), including all of The Sea of Fertility, so I found your ranking very enjoyable. Total Chad move reading the last paragraph of Runaway Horses with no forewarning lol. As can be expected, I have some slight disagreements here and there, but the only major disagreement I have is that Confessions of a Mask is bottom tier for me, I really think Mishima loses a lot of his magic when writing in the first person. His enigmatic and elegant style needs an aloof but sardonic narrator in order to avoid getting simplistic and preachy IMO. Thanks for making this. Also, if you haven't seen it, you should check out the film Thirst for Love (1967) by Koreyoshi Kurahara, featuring a cameo by Mishima. Although it kind of bungles the fire ceremony scene, it's otherwise an incredible and stylish adaptation that really gets Mishima's vibe. Criterion has an English subtitles edition.
Thank you for watching! I wish you good luck in your continued reading of Mishima. Confessions is an interesting outlier here because I believe it's his only "I-novel" but it's also many people's first read. My personal feeling is that he's pretty aloof/sardonic even in the first person! Also thank you for the rec I'll definitely check out that film.
@@ABooktubeChannel I recommend his documentary movie "Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters"
The movie is like reading his book with his vibe. The plots and the protagonist is so meticulous work.
It showed What's inside his thought.
@@kunslipper Loved that film! Paul Schrader's work never ceases to amaze - a rich resource for Mishima lovers.
@@kunslipper There’s another film called “Mishima the Last Debate” I highly recommend it too
@@MrMikkyn oh thank you I'll check it out.
great video
Thank you!
Excellent overview
Thanks for watching!
Just finished Life For Sale. First book I read from him. It's goofy I'll give it that.
I have currently two Mishima books at home, Confessions of a Mask and The temple of the golden pavilion. Do you think those are a good start for his literature? I would start with Confessions of a mask, but I don’t know if Temple is too big of a step after that. Would you recommend another book to read after Confessions?
I actually think both are fantastic introductory books. Temple is not difficult to read, so I would just jump right into it. The Sound of the Waves is also a good intro text!
@@ABooktubeChannel thank you!
What was that bookstore in Manhattan that specializes in translations?
THE SAILOR WHO FELL FROM GRACE WITH THE SEA was made into a movie, reset in England, with Kris Kristopherson and Sara Mills. I love the novel but have no opinion about the movi, which i saw once over 40 years ago, before i read the boook.
the disrespect to forbidden colours which was my first Mishima read and one of my favourite books of all time. Yes, it is long but it so lyrical and the characters are so fleshed out that they feel palpable
Hi im new to reading literature and i found yukio mishima and was interested in reading his books. Which do u think i should start with. I saw some people recommend to start with 'Confessions of a mask'.
Snow in Spring is certainly a masterpiece, the later books in the series I thought got worse and worse; the second was OK at best but didn't really have any outstanding literary quality, the third I thought was bad and the fourth was just forgettable. Confession was well written but I thought the content was despicable, and Sun and Steel just felt cramped and full of self-loathing. I had had it with Mishima by then. Now I am coming back and I'm waiting for Golden Pavilion and Sailor, and the new biography by that Japanese governor.
ive never touched a mishima book before till a couple days ago, im readin forbidden colors n so far i am enjoying it. im barely on chapter 3 mind you so my thoughts so far on it are still in its infancy
just finished it n THAT SHII WAS CRAZYYY
@@thndrbltbuddhalovesyall LOL
@@trevorperry11 I KNOW RIGHT
Excellent.
ありがとう!
Tbh I think sound of the waves is pretty overrated everything about it is pretty simple tho I liked the way he used sea as a literary element i overall think it's pretty cliche-while reading it you know what will happen at the end. It doesn't feel realistic at all and I feel like watching a romance anime while reading it.
Sun and Steel?
where would you put sun and steel?
Sun and Steel isn’t fiction so it’s hard to compare, but I remember enjoying it although I don’t subscribe to Mishima’s politics
If you are spoiling the plots what is the point in ranking the books?
Respeta el canon y es original.
Kazuya mishima, hehachi mishima😈👿😈
Ur doing full spoilers.
Круто
same
The statues are Greek, not Roman.
Good catch!