Oct 31, 2015

Book Review–The Storyteller and his Three Daughters by Lian Hearn

 

the-storyteller-and-his-three-daughters

Lian Hearn has been recommended to me on a number of occasions by a number or people who know my tastes and hobbies.  I can’t for the life of me figure out why I haven’t taken them up on the recommendation.  Perhaps it’s my reaction to hyped up books and authors (I still haven’t read Harry Potter).

Sometimes other people do know you best.

Hearn is most well known for her immensely successful Tales of the Otori series, a fantasy series inspired by pre-modern Japan.  The Storyteller and his Three Daughters, however is a historical fiction set in late 1880’s Tokyo.

This book is deceptive in the best possible way.  Unassuming, quiet, steadily paced it ingratiates itself with the reader and before you know it we have gone from a tale about an aging and unhappy storyteller, to a tale of brutality and political intrigue.

There’s a skilled hand at work here, a lightness of touch in the telling of the tale. It also paints an evocative and realistic (as far as I can tell) picture of Japan in the throws of cultural crises, the fall of the Shogunate and the effect of the European colonial powers plying their culture and interests.

Not afraid to experiment, Hearn presents the dialogue in the book as it would be rendered in early novels of the Meiji era i.e. like a play script. This may pose some issues it you are particularly attached to conventional dialogue presentation, but I didn’t notice it after awhile and  I think it adds a certain verisimilitude.

I loved it for the focus on storytelling on the ancient arts of Japan and for the tales within tales, drama intrigue and subtle horror - I think an expanded version of The Tale of the Nose would sit very well in a horror anthology.

A lovely book to read, a fine example of craft.  I will be reading more.

An Australian writer you should be able to find Lian’s work at your closest library or it can be ordered from Booktopia.


aww-badge-2015_thumb[2]This review is part of the Australian Women Writers Challenge 2015.  Please check out this pagefor more great writing from Australian women.

 

 


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Comments (4)

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Lian Hearn is a pen name for Gillian Rubinstein, author of a lot of children's and YA books, who will be GoH at next year's Swancon. Tales Of The Otori is set in a universe in which ninja really can do all those magical things people here believed they could do. Well worth reading! She certainly has done a lot of research for her Japanese fiction.

You really should read Harry Potter some time. Just because it's hyped doesn't mean it's not wonderful. :-) It took me years to get around to Lord Of The Rings, another much hyped book, and when I did I was only sorry it had taken so long.

When you 're ready, of course. I once sent a copy of the first Harry Potter book to an Americsn pen pal(he was a Luddite who refused to go online). He had been going on and on about it, so I thought he should at least read it. His response was to hate it anyway, because the were no American characters in it. (Rolls eyes!)
My recent post October 31, Not A Halloween Post - Happy Birthday, Dezzy!
3 replies · active 489 weeks ago
I tried to get the Tales of the Otori from our library but I have had to order them in. Her fiction is well researched from what I can tell.

The thing that daunts me about HPis the same thing as Wheel of time.. too many books :D
Wheel Of Time is about thirteen books long. Harry Potter is seven. And the first four can be read standalone, though you do need to have read the first to know what's going on. But you can stop anywhere along there if you feel you've had enough. Really, the only one that ends on a cliffhanger is the sixth and if you've read that far you will WANT to read the rest. If you're working in a school library and haven't read this series, you've missed out. ;-)
My recent post October 31, Not A Halloween Post - Happy Birthday, Dezzy!
I won't take much convincing I have since read Rowling's crime series.

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