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Books with author Mishima Yukio

  • Runaway Horses

    Yukio mishima

    Paperback (Pocket, July 3, 1978)
    Book by Yukio mishima
  • Confessions of a Mask

    Yukio Mishima

    Paperback (Peter Owen Ltd, April 12, 2007)
    Confessions of a Mask
  • Confessions of a Mask

    Yukio Mishima

    Hardcover (Peter Owen Limited, March 15, 1960)
    None
  • The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea

    Yukio Mishima

    Hardcover (Secker & Warburg, Aug. 16, 1966)
    None
  • The Sound of Waves

    Yukio Mishima

    Paperback (Berkley Publishing Corporation, March 15, 1965)
    Set in a remote fishing village in Japan, The Sound of Waves is a timeless story of first love. A young fisherman is entranced at the sight of the beautiful daughter of the wealthiest man in the village. They fall in love, but must then endure the calumny and gossip of the villagers.
  • The sound of waves

    Yukio Mishima

    Hardcover (Secker & Warburg, March 15, 1957)
    None
  • Confessions of a Mask

    Yukio Mishima

    Paperback (Peter Owen Ltd, March 15, 1967)
    Book by Yukio Mishima
  • Confessions of a Mask

    Yukio Mishima

    Paperback (Charles E. Tuttle Co., March 15, 1971)
    None
  • Confessions of a Mask

    yukio mishima

    Paperback (Panther, March 15, 1977)
    None
  • The Sound of Waves / The Temple of Dawn

    Yukio Mishima

    Paperback (Berkley Medallion Edition, 1965 / Washington Square Press, 1975, March 15, 1965)
    None
  • Runaway horses

    Yukio Mishima

    Unknown Binding (Knopf, March 15, 1973)
    None
  • Confessions of a Mask

    Mishima

    Paperback (HarperCollins Publishers, May 9, 1985)
    One of the classics of modern Japanese fiction.Confessions of a Mask is the story of an adolescent who must learn to live with the painful fact that he is unlike other young men. Mishima's protagonist discovers that he is becoming a homosexual in polite, post-war Japan. To survive, he must live behind a mask of propriety. Christopher Isherwood comments—"One might say, 'Here is a Japanese Gide,'....But no, Mishima is himself—a very Japanese Mishima; lucid in the midst of emotional confusion, funny in the midst of despair, quite without pomposity, sentimentality or self-pity. His book, like no other, has made me understand a little of how it feels to be Japanese. I think it is greatly superior, as art and as a human document to his deservedly praised novel, The Sound of Waves."