1. Endo
Shusako or Shusako Endo?: Japanese names in modern times consist of a family name (surname), followed by a given name; in that order. Nevertheless, when a Japanese
name is written in the Roman alphabet, ever since the Meiji era official policy has been to reverse the order, but recently the government has
stated its intention to change this policy. (From Wikipedia)
2. At the Wikipedia: Shūsaku Endō
3. A Catholic
writer. He is a very singular case of Japanese writer because he is considered
a Catholic author, when almost all the Japanese writers tend to follow the
culture and religion (Shinto or Buddhism) of their country. In Western literature
there are also Catholic writers; the most famous ones are the English
Graham Greene and the German Heinrich Böll. But why are they called
"Catholic authors"? Only because their characters act as practising
Catholics (they attend Mass, they pray...), and one of their side topics is
religion. This is a curious description for an artist, because we usually talk
about romantic, realistic, mystery authors.
4. Two well
known Japanese writers are Yukio Mishima and his friend Yasunari Kawabata. The
first one was an extreme right-wing activist and in 1970 he tried a coup against
the government because he said the 1947 Constitution was imposed by the USA. He
failed, and then he committed suicide by the ritual hara-kiri. His friend
Kawabata, who won the Nobel Prize in 1968, committed suicide gassing himself
allegedly because of his friend death.
5. Another
rare Japanese writer was Lafcadio Hearn (not typical Japanese names or
surnames!). He was of a Greek-Irish descent (his first-first name was Patrick)
and lived for 10 years in New Orleans, where he wrote a book about his stay
there. Then he went to live in Japan, where he changed his name to a Japanese
one (Koizumi Yakumo), married a Japanese woman and wrote short stories in
Japanese about ghosts (typical there).
6. But the
writer I wanted to recommend you is Natsume Soseki and his book Botchan, a novel about the funny
adventures of a student in a secondary school. This book has been compared to Huckleberry Finn and The Catcher in the Rye. Don’t miss them!
QUESTIONS
ABOUT THE STORY
What was the reason of their meeting?
What is the meaning of “We had reached that age”?
Who was Father Bosch?
What happened to him during the war?
What is the meaning of the metaphor “bowling alleys”?
Why was he accused of being a spy?
Can you give a personal example of “at some time of their lives, people all taste the same sorrows and the same trials”?
We can see two sides of Father Bosch character: what are they?
What is the “convict number tattooed in her arm”?
“I am a Catholic and I know I am supposed to forgive the others... But I have no desire to forgive them.” What do you think of this sentence?
In the story, what does the symbol “smell of onions in one’s reek” stand for?
What’s the meaning of Father Bosch’s smile at the end of the story?
He said “I only feel pain in the winter when it’s cold. When spring comes, I’m fine again. This is the way it always is”. What did he mean with this?
VOCABULARY:
pay attention to the context and say a synonym or a definition in English
pate, squawk,
muse, tow, catcher, rifle, plot, attend, aisle, pew, livestock, score, reek,
umpteenth