This is another cracking book, and one which truly transports you to a different time and place. Memoirs of a Geisha, by Arthur Golden gives you exactly what it says on the tin. We hear a firsthand account of a young Japanese girl - Chiyo - who is taken from a small fishing village just before her mother dies, and instead of being adopted as she thinks, she becomes a maid in a house in Kyoto, with a view to becoming a geisha. The resident geisha takes a dislike to her and makes her life a misery. It looks like she will be a maid all her life - but her life turns around after a chance meeting with a man who she feels destined to be with. The change in fortune means that she does indeed become a geisha - whose job is to entertain men in a variety of ways ... not necessarily how you would think. The voice of Chiyo and then Sayuri (her geisha name) is so strong that you feel like she is just chatting to you about her life over a drink or meal. There are beautiful descriptions of the places, the kimonos, the ornaments and, of course, the other characters. The changes that take place, not only to Sayuri personally, but also to the country are vast - the action starts in 1929 and takes us through the hardships in Japan of the Second World War, and then the passage of time that eventually brings healing to all. It's a fantastic insight to a world that we might think we know. It feels like a very truthful tale and is fascinating and well worth the effort.
My STAR rating: FIVE.
Length: 435 print pages.
Price I paid: £3.00.
Formats available: print; audio CD; audio download; ebook
Every man should have one ... will have to give it a read.
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