Description
Kenzaburō Ōe (1935–2023) was a celebrated Japanese author and Nobel Prize laureate in Literature (1994). Known for his deeply introspective and politically engaged works, Ōe explored themes of identity, personal trauma, and the human condition. His writing was profoundly influenced by his experiences raising a son with a disability.
Ōe’s works often grappled with Japan’s post-war identity, offering critiques of nationalism and a call for pacifism. His prose, rooted in existential philosophy, challenged societal norms and earned him a global reputation as one of Japan’s most significant modern literary voices.
This is the 1995 reprint of the author’s first novel, published in 1958 when he was just 23 years old. The novel is a harrowing allegory about societal cruelty, human resilience, and the fragility of civilization. It reflects themes that would define much of Ōe’s later work.
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