Read The Pillow Book of the Flower Samurai Online
Authors: Barbara Lazar
Copyright © 2012 Barbara D. Lazar
The right of Barbara D. Lazar to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publishers or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.
First published as an Ebook by Headline Publishing Group in 2012
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library
eISBN : 978 0 7553 8927 8
HEADLINE PUBLISHING GROUP
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Contents
IV. Third Month Third Day Dancing
III. The Gods of Directions’ Directive
I. Echizen Governor Taira No Michimori
V. Birth Anniversary and The Coin
Genealogy of Emperors of the Late Heian Japan
Acknowledgements
First, I wish to express my most profound gratitude to my superb agent, Alexandra Machinist, as well as to Dorothy Vincent and Kaitlin Nicholis at Janklow & Nesbit Associates. Second, my extraordinary indebtedness to Claire Baldwin, Emily Kitchin and Hazel Orme for their enthusiasm and their superb pruning, shaping and editing.
Gratitude to Fred Brandow who assisted initally, to Diane Capito, Ginny Ford, Barbara Gere and Leila Klemtner, a writing group who nursed the manuscript to its adolescence; to Jean Jackson, Butch McGhee, Diane LaCombe, Jacque Paramenter, and to the Penultimates – Tim Talbert, Beaty Spear, Steve Stewart and Marjorie Brody, who cherished and badgered it into adulthood. An extraordinary and heartfelt appreciation to Barbara J. Gere who is the artist who created the magnificent maps. I wish to thank the San Antonio Public Librarians, especially those at Tobin Oakwell Library and the Interlibrary Loan Department for obtaining the inaccessible, and the reference librarians at Trinity University for their never-ending assistance. A special appreciation to the Japan America Society of San Antonio, Peter Hoover and particularly Ikuko Groesbeck. Also my indebtedness to Curt Harrell and Dr Roger Spotswood for their lavish book loans and knowledge as well as Dr Fred Notehelfer, Dr Hank Glassman, Reiko Yoshimura at the Freer Gallery of Art, Sharon S. Takeda, Greg Pflugfelder, Ann Yonemura, and Michael Watson.
My love and wholehearted gratitude to Dr Diane B. Latona (nee Mirro) who gave me more wisdom and information than are in books, to my father who bequeathed a love of words, to my mother who bequeathed a love of reading and to my husband and life partner, Gregory Surfas, who endured my scribblings – mornings, evenings, middle of the nights and weekends – and whose love sustained me through each sentence.
Historical Note
The Gempei War, the cataclysmic clash between the Taira and Minamoto clans in late twelfth-century Japan, heralded the end of its Golden Age (794-1185). At this critical time in Japan’s history, warriors continued their progression to power until they controlled the country several centuries later. Many Noh and Kabuki plays are set during this war because of the war’s innumerable heroic exploits and battles. These plays are written from the Minamoto point of view, but
The Pillow Book of the Flower Samurai
’s point of view is the Taira’s.
Principal Characters
Kozaisō, writer of the
Pillow Book
, formerly Fifth Daughter
At a
shōen
(estate)
Daigoro no Goro, Buddhist priest (code name Three Eyes)
Chiba no Tashiyori, proprietor of the
sh
ō
en
Akio, samurai (code name Oyster)
Tashiko, a girl
Emi, another girl (code name Lotus)
Master Isamu, samurai and master teacher
Uba, a boy and student of the martial arts
At the Village of Outcasts
Hitomi, owner and manager
Rin,
choj
ā
(head, lead) of the ‘free’ Women-for-Play
Aya, a girl
Misuki, a girl (code name Lumbering Badger)
Otfukure, elderly Woman-for-Play, teacher of the pleasing arts
At Rokuhara
Obāsan, Honourable-Aged-One-Who-Waits-On-Women in Michimori’s household
Ryo, Obāsan’s nephew (code name Snake)
Hoichi, Mokuhasa’s cousin
Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa (code name Fox)
Antoku, Emperor, son of Takakura and Kiyomori’s daughter
The Taira Clan (Kozaish
ō
’s)
Michimori, a commander of the clan
Tokikazu, captain to Michimori (code name Genji)
Mokuhasa, samurai and special guard to Michimori
Sadakokai, samurai and special guard to Michimori
Kiyomori, uncle of Michimori, leader of the country
Koremori, cousin to Michimori (code name Wisteria)
Shigehira, cousin to Michimori (code name Oak)
Tsunemasa, cousin to Michimori (code name Drake)
Tomomori, cousin to Michimori (code name Large Cicada)
Munemori, cousin to Michimori (code name Purple Grass)
Norimori, father of Michimori
The Minamoto Clan
Yoshitsune, nephew of Yoshitomo (code name Tiger)
Yukiie, brother of Yoshitomo (code name Hare)
Yoshitomo, father of Yoritomo, Noriyori and Yoshitsune (code name Ox)
Kiso Yoshinaka, nephew of Yoshitomo and Yukiie (code name Rat)
Noriyori, son of Yoshitomo (code name Sheep)
Yoritomo, son of Yoshitomo (code name Horse)