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Memoirs of a Geisha: A Novel Paperback – January 10, 1999

4.6 out of 5 stars 3,402 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 434 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage; Vintage contemporaries ed edition (January 10, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679781587
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679781585
  • Product Dimensions: 5.3 x 1 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3,402 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #14,729 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
No, really, it is. I will read this book nearly every year for the rest of my life.
The story of Saiyuri is a very detailed one, and how she came to be a geisha. The (fictional) biographical novel of a geisha is definitely a wonderful read. I love all things Japanese, and this book is a great insight into the world, as it is well researched and well written. In some places it is like a story, and in others it is like reading an encyclopedia of Japanese culture, and the two mix so well together that it is almost unnoticeable. The characters are believable, and each ones follows their path in life and you know where most of them land. That is definitely good story-telling.
Moreover, the book is also going to draw you into a life story you will want to know about, even if you saw the movie first (like me). believe me, the movie has nothing on the book. It only gives you a visual for what the world looks like. The true depth of the book is much deeper, stronger and more drawn out in a way that the reader will find most enjoyable.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
This was the first geisha book I read and I enjoyed it. Then I read Geisha of Gion (Mineko Iwasaki) and dismissed it as B.S. Adding Geisha (Lesley Downer) to the mix filled in some things that Mineko didn't talk about because of the era she was in and actually resolved all the problems I had with Memoirs--it just didn't occur to me until a little bit ago. I know it's been a while since I last read Memoirs, but other than stealing a good portion of Mineko's life story (for which she later sued him), I can't figure out why I would still dismiss this book as B.S.

Potential problems (and their resolutions):

1. Geiko were recruited by procurers before 1958, and it's completely possible that Sayuri's sister could've ended up as a courtesan
2. They basically were indentured servants before that year
3. They go to class like Sayuri did
4. They have older sisters
5. They change their hairstyles as they change their ranks (though Arthur calls the first style "momofuku" instead of "wareshinobu")
6. Mizuage involved sex until 1958
7. "Dances of the Old Capitol" exists, though it's called the Miyako Odori
8. Dannas existed (and maybe still do)
9. The hanamachi did close down for WWII
10. They really do use the hereditary name part thing

The only things that could possibly be different were whether they ever had sex with their dannas (even before 1958's prostitution ban) and maybe how easy it was to get a danna. Even the flint on the back for good luck could've been done and the books I've read just skipped over it!

Since it *is* still fiction, I wouldn't recommend it as a first book about geisha to anyone. But for an absorbing read after you've gone through a pile of (geisha) nonfiction? Absolutely.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Bear with me please. Years ago I saw a film that I broke the world for me. I had gone begrudgingly, with my older sister to see Titanic. And it's been with me ever since. It could be nostalgia speaking, but for me, no other film has had the same ability to immerse me in that world, in that time, in that character's life like that film does. I've never seen another shot that convinces me I'm in the film, like the long 'bird flight' over Titanic. It's breath-taking. One minute, you are sitting a theater watching a movie, and the next.... you're flying above the Titanic as a bird, and then you step onto the deck, and you can smell the salt air, feel the vibration of the ship under your feet, and you are on the Titanic.

I almost went to Gion in "Memoirs of a Geisha." I could smell the streets, I could see the beautiful kimono, I could feel the weight of the world on Sayuri's shoulders. But I wasn't immersed like I was with Titanic. But it was so close, it was so very, very close to that experience. No book has ever done that quite like this one did. I've read books I couldn't put down. I've read books that were so rich with detail it was like a truffle in my mouth, but not like this. Arthur Golden has never written another book, and the reason for that is he put everything he had in this one. And, it works. This book is such a different experience from reading other books. I genuinely feel it should be compared to a different art form -- a visual one. (To be perfectly honest, at points the writing is weak -- astonished and elegant are overused in the narrative. The dialog is pretty but repetitive. But it doesn't seem important at the time.)

It's a story that I think can speak to so many readers that I always recommend it. And if you are a writer, this is a must read. If you are a traveler.... well, take a journey to the past, because this is as close to time traveling as any of us will ever get.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Part of the reason I read a book-- especially fiction-- is for the choice of words and how they are put together to give a sense of satisfaction in a well- constructed sentence. And if it says profound things along the way, even better.

This book has none of that. While it tells an interesting story, the words could not be plainer. That matches the supposed style of the narrator, but makes the book much less enjoyable.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Arthur Golden's remarkable first novel, "Memoirs of a Geisha," is disguised as the memoir of a geisha. The fictional tale follows the life of a Japanese girl, Chiyo, the daughter of a poor fisherman from the small sea-side village of Yoroido. At the age of nine, as her mother lays dying, her father sells her and her sister, Satsu, to a local businessman. A young, gray-eyed beauty, Chiyo is then sold to a geisha house in the Gion district of Kyoto, while her plainer sister is sold into prostitution. Chiyo goes to school to learn the arts of the geisha, such as dance, playing the shamisen, and tea ceremony. In time, Chiyo becomes Sayuri, the beautiful geisha skilled in the art of entertaining men. She must deal with Granny and Mother, the greedy owners of the Nitta okiya (geisha house), where she also endures harsh treatment from Hatsumomo, the beautiful but cruelly heartless head geisha. As Sayuri entertains a variety of businessmen, she yearns for just one man—referred to only as the “Chairman”—who showed her kindness as a young girl.

Golden’s great gift is his ability to bring to life characters who are so complete and distinctive. The geisha Hatsumomo stands out as one of the most malicious villains in all of fiction. In addition to excellent characterization, the author provides the reader with an unfailingly entertaining plot. The use of Sayuri as the narrator provides the story with an utterly convincing voice as she relates her story in a friendly manner that captures her emotions and enables the reader to identify with her feelings of sadness, surprise and confusion. Golden's storytelling is rich and well-paced. He is absolutely brilliant in his description of the customs and rituals of the geisha. “Memoirs of a Geisha” is one of those rare works that I can safely say is one of the best book I have ever read.
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