
This is the first paperback edition of Richard Bowring’s translation of the diary of Japan’s greatest prose writer, author of the celebrated Tale of Genji. Also included is the first translation of her autobiographical poems. A highly personalized mixture of penetrating self-analysis and reportage, the diary gives us a unique glimpse of the Heian court at its apogee. It is well known for descriptions of the ceremonial surrounding the birth of a prince, but most of all, perhaps, for Murasaki’s tart appraisals of her famous contemporaries, Izumi Shikibu and Sei Shōnagon, author of The Pillow Book. In contrast, the poems are seen by Professor Bowring as separate from immediate autobiographical context. “This is a splendid translation, and as a piece of scholarship, it is a tour de force. The fame of the diary’s early pages will be even further enhanced by Bowring’s rendering.”—Masao Miyoshi, University of California at Berkeley “The atmosphere of mediaeval rituals, meticulously depicted by Murasaki, creates a series of vivid, surrealistic impressions. … Of particular piquancy is the gossip, especially tidbits concerning distinguished personalities.”—Hiroakai Sato, Asiaweek Richard Bowring is University Lecturer in Japanese, University of Cambridge.
Author

Murasaki Shikibu, or Lady Murasaki as she is sometimes known in English (Japanese: 紫式部), was a Japanese novelist, poet, and a maid of honor of the imperial court during the Heian period. She is best known as the author of The Tale of Genji, written in Japanese between about 1000 and 1008, one of the earliest and most famous novels in human history. "Murasaki Shikibu" was not her real name; her actual name is unknown, though some scholars have postulated that her given name might have been Takako (for Fujiwara Takako). Her diary states that she was nicknamed "Murasaki" ("purple wisteria blossom") at court, after a character in The Tale of Genji. "Shikibu" refers to her father's position in the Bureau of Ceremony (shikibu-shō). ————————————- Murasaki Shikibu. (2007, October 8). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 22:03, October 19, 2007, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?t...