'Only Kiyoko Murata can convey this world' YOKO OGAWA, author of The Memory Police, Yomiuri ShibunThe year is 1903, and tenacious and spirited Aoi Ichi is sold to the most exclusive brothel in Kumamoto, Japan, becoming the protegee of Shinonome, the oiran, or the highest-ranking courtesan.Through Shinonome's teachings, fifteen-year-old Ichi begins to understand the intertwined power of sex and money. Education for a courtesan extends beyond the art of seduction, and as Ichi is taught to read and write she develops a voice that refuses to be dampened by the brothel's rigid hierarchy.Outside the cloistered world of the red-light district, rumours of local worker strikes grow, and as the seasons change in Kumamoto, Ichi, Shinonome and their fellow courtesans begin to wonder how they might redistribute the power and wealth of the brothels among themselves.Critically acclaimed veteran writer Kiyoko Murata creates in stunning detail the harsh yet vibrant lives of women in a red-light district at the turn of the twentieth century. Based on real-life events, A Woman of Pleasure is a testament to the bonds between women and the power of owning one's language and freedom.
Murata Kiyoko Bücher
Diese japanische Autorin erlangte mit ihrem Roman „Der Kessel“ (Le Chaudron) bedeutende Anerkennung, der später von Akira Kurosawa für seinen gefeierten Film „Rhapsodie in August“ adaptiert wurde. Ihre literarischen Ambitionen wurden durch den Kyushu Arts Festival Preis für „Die Stimme des Wassers“ (La voix de l’eau) stark gefördert. Ihre Schriften tauchen tief in die menschliche Psyche und gesellschaftliche Themen ein und erforschen die komplexen Verbindungen zwischen Individuen und ihrer Umwelt.
