Memoirs of a Geisha
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This is a seductive and evocative epic on an intimate scale, which tells the extraordinary story of a geisha girl. Summoning up more than twenty years of Japan's most dramatic history, it uncovers a hidden world of eroticism and enchantment, exploitation and degredation. From a small fishing village in 1929, the tale moves to the glamorous and decadent heart of Kyoto in the 1930s, where a young peasant girl is sold as servant and apprentice to a renowned geisha house. She tells her story many years later from the Waldorf Astoria in New York; it exquisitely evokes another culture, a different time and the details of an extraordinary way of life. It conjures up the perfection and the ugliness of life behind rice-paper screens, where young girls learn the arts of the geisha - dancing and singing, how to wind the kimonok, how to walk and pour tea, and how to beguile the most powerful men.
Buchkauf
Memoirs of a Geisha, Arthur Golden
- Sprache
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2008
- Buchzustand
- Gut
- Preis
- € 2,91
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- Titel
- Memoirs of a Geisha
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Autor*innen
- Arthur Golden
- Verlag
- Pearson Education Limited
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2008
- Seitenzahl
- 0
- ISBN10
- 1405882670
- ISBN13
- 9781405882675
- Kuratierte Auswahl
- Penguin readers.
- Kategorie
- Biografien & Memoiren, Zeitgenössische Belletristik
- Beschreibung
- This is a seductive and evocative epic on an intimate scale, which tells the extraordinary story of a geisha girl. Summoning up more than twenty years of Japan's most dramatic history, it uncovers a hidden world of eroticism and enchantment, exploitation and degredation. From a small fishing village in 1929, the tale moves to the glamorous and decadent heart of Kyoto in the 1930s, where a young peasant girl is sold as servant and apprentice to a renowned geisha house. She tells her story many years later from the Waldorf Astoria in New York; it exquisitely evokes another culture, a different time and the details of an extraordinary way of life. It conjures up the perfection and the ugliness of life behind rice-paper screens, where young girls learn the arts of the geisha - dancing and singing, how to wind the kimonok, how to walk and pour tea, and how to beguile the most powerful men.