My father asked me to do this a long time ago, and I've had a handful of requests since. And then again another just recently, so I've decided to give it a go.
That is: once a month I'll spend a blog post or two on one of the stories from A Robe of Feathers and Other Stories, shedding a little light on the mythology/superstition/folklore or why on earth that story came to be. A kind of "end notes" to the tales. Especially for anyone not familiar with Japanese culture or thought, I've been told that this might be an interesting -- possibly enlightening? -- thing to do.
I'm game!
Today I'll do the introduction. And since I'm staring at a stretch of holidays (Golden Week), I'll put up the first installment tomorrow or soon thereafter.
If there is one thing I have loved and will always love about Japan, it's the way the culture blends reality and fantasy in a very natural and non apologetic way. It's an idea I've always had trouble explaining to people back home. How if I was with a group of friends discussing politics and someone said her dead grandmother had just paid her a visit during the obon festival no one would bat an eye. I was just no good at conveying the surreal-ness of those all too frequent situations. Voila'! The short story. And so trying to capture that feeling in short story form is basically where the idea for A Robe came from.
Even at the time of writing the stories, sending them out, and seeing them published in magazines, I didn't know exactly what they were. They didn't feel like fantasy. And later my agent agreed saying he believed for a story to be labeled fantasy it would have to be set in a fantastical world. My stories aren't. They're all set in Japan, past and present. The settings are real; however, what goes on inside the story can be a bit out there. I like magical realism, but the more I read about that category it didn't seem to fit either.
So in the end I made up my own genre -- mythical realism.
Every story in the book takes some aspect of Japanese culture (or folklore or superstition or history or mythical creature...) and presents it in the context of a short tale. You'll find sadistic bean washers and debonair devils, as well as a thousand-stitched belt and decoration bicycles (deco chari).
Not only will these posts offer inside information about the stories and myth, but I'll also put up scans of artwork I did for the piece or photos I've taken of relevant objects/places related to the story.
And to get us started...
The title story "A Robe of Feathers" is based on the Japanese tale Hagoromo. I'll go into more detail about that tale and the different versions of it in my next post, but for now just know there is a tree in the story where an angel hangs her robe of feathers while she frolics in the ocean early one morning. The entire event is said to have happened at Miho no Matsubara, only a hour's drive from my house.
Here is a photo of the sunrise behind the actual tree. If you look real hard you can see the angel bathing out there.
Okay. No you can't. But if I were any good with Photoshop you could.
I'll leave it to your imagination. Which is a lot of what A Robe of Feathers is...imagination. But the facts are there and I'll be telling you more about them with these posts.
Otanoshimi ni~!
4 comments:
Thank you, for pursuing this.
This is gonna be great! I'm going to purchase your stories soon. I always look forward to your posts.
Oh, this is going to be so cool! Really looking forward to this. BTW, I disagree with the idea that you have to have a fantasy world to have fantasy. There's urban fantasy, which I'd say some of your stories fit into, there's historical fantasy, which some of your stories fit, there's magical realism (which I'm not conversant enough in to say whether I think there's any match or not), but I'd say there are lots of different fantastical elements to your stories without having to resort to the traditional "other world." I do however love the idea of mythical realism. So much so I'd love to see a whole anthology or magazine based on the concept. How cool... (drooling now), LOL.
Eldon, thank you. (^^)v
MDK, I love your photo. I'm happy to have a face with my old buddy, MDK.
Victoria, very good points! One day we'll have to sit down and talk literature and writing. That would be so fun.
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