
Zenmetsu no Hakone o kisekiteki ni manugarete(Miraculously escaped the annihilation of Hakone)
【Masterpieces of Modern Japanese Literature⑯】
By Junichiro Tanizaki
Narrated by Nana Nagao
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A short story by Junichiro Tanizaki
“”I had been staying at the Kowakudani Hotel in Kowakudani, Hakone, since August 2nd. However, on the night of the 31st, I went to visit the Hakone Hotel by the shore of Lake Ashi in Hakone Town, stayed there for one night, and then boarded a shared automobile at 11:30 a.m. the next morning, on the 1st. As we passed through Ashinoyu and had traveled about half a ri (approximately 2 km) along the mountain road, we were struck by an earthquake.”
This audiobook is a new recording of the “Reading Timeless Story Series” that was performed at the Museum of Modern Japanese Literature on March 23, 2024.
Author :Junichiro Tanizaki
Narrator : Nana Nagao
Produced by:Koé no Shoten
Special Thanks:Shigoto, Inc. / ROUDOKU.TALKER.JP
Listening Length:00:06:12
Release Date:2024/8/22
*For how to listen, pricing, purchase methods, payment options, and more, please check each distribution site.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
1886 – 1965
Born in Nihonbashi, Tokyo, he entered the University of Tokyo’s Department of Japanese Literature but left before graduating. While still a student, he co-founded the literary magazine Shinshichō and published works such as the play Tanjō and the short story Shisei, which earned high praise from Nagai Kafū and marked his debut as a promising new writer. Following the Great Kantō Earthquake, he moved to the Kansai region and, in 1924, published Chijin no Ai(“Naomi”). In 1943, he began serializing Sasameyuki(“The Makioka Sisters”)in Chūō Kōron, but the military authorities censored the work. Despite this, he continued writing it in secret and published it after the war. While depicting an aesthetic and refined world, he also explored traditional Japanese beauty in works such as Manji(“Quicksand”), Tade kuu mushi (“Some Prefer Nettles”), Shunkinshō (“A Portrait of Shunkin”), In’ei Raisan (“In Praise of Shadows”), and Kagi (“The Key”).