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I have just finished reading Geisha, A Life, written by former geisha, (Or former geiko) Mineko Iwasaki.
The book is extremely captivating from beginning to end and her life is so different from anyone else’s, that it’s impossible to stop reading. So far, this is the best book I have ever read for many reasons.
Rande Brown has done an excellent job translating the book from Japanese to English and the vocabulary is so precise and descriptive and everything is written so well! This was one of the reasons why I loved the book so much. The precision of the vocabulary and the vast word choice makes this book already a must-read.

The book was not only written because Mineko wanted to tell her story since she became a maiko, (Apprentice geiko) but also to cover the lies that Arthur Golden promoted with his bestseller, Memoirs Of A Geisha. In his novel, he writes that geiko sell themselves like prostitutes, (Actually he depicted the life of an oiran, [High-class courtesan] instead of the life a geiko. The mizuage, for instance, in his novel, means the deflowering of a girl, [Just like how the oiran use the term] when it actually means the transition from maiko to geiko.) when that isn’t true at all. After Arthur Golden announced through his novel that Mineko Iwasaki had helped him write the novel, (Geiko have to vow not to tell anyone about their lives) when he sweared not to do that, she was shocked, and sued him for that. The later editions didn’t come with Mineko Iwasaki’s name.
The story is about how Masako Tanaka (Her name before she became a geiko), born to a poor family, decided to help her parents out by allowing them to sell her to an okiya (Or geisha house). She was 6 at the time, and the adult world was new to her. She meets with some older sisters (Who she has never heard of), and we follow her life as she abandons her childhood and moves on to adulthood mentally and physically. She puts every detail of her life down, be it when she hid around in closets because she was too shy of somebody or when men tried to abuse her while she was walking around through the streets of Kyoto. The ending is quite sad, but it’s a true story, and not everything about the world is wonderful.
I felt like the book was so great because tradition and values is all about what the book is about. I learned a lot about traditional Japan reading this book, and I loved every single moment I was reading it. I recommend this book to anyone who’s interested in Japanese culture or in the life of Gion’s greatest geiko. This is definitely the best book I’ve ever read, and if you have the chance to pick it up, go ahead! You won’t regret it!
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Nice writing style. Looking forward to reading more from you.
Chris Moran
Comment by Chris Moran March 29, 2008 @ 12:03 pmThank you!
Comment by Alvy April 8, 2008 @ 6:51 pmI absolutely LOVED this book when I borrowed it from the library. So much so that I ended up buying it.
Arthur Golden can suck an egg. He portrayed Geisha as prostitutes, and was so wrong on so many things :p
Comment by .nodame. July 18, 2009 @ 3:51 pmThat’s right! XD
Mineko Iwasaki should make HIM a prostitute on a new book. It’s his fault that geisha is now a synonym for prostitute and that’s completely inaccurate and wrong.
It’s so great that you read it! :D I never knew anyone who read it too! XD It truly is a really good book.
Comment by Alvy July 18, 2009 @ 7:39 pmOh ho ho ho! I would pay money to see that XD
I wish more people would read this. I think it would truly open their eyes, and maybe, just maybe, they would stop making pervy jokes about them -.-
Oh I know! You’re the only person that I know who’s read it, as well :’D
Comment by .nodame. July 19, 2009 @ 10:08 pmWow, this makes me want to check out this book. I loved Memoirs of a geisha, but I had no idea it had so much wrong with it. I took it as fiction, not fact, but still..
Comment by danielle September 24, 2009 @ 1:12 amI can’t believe he used her name when she specifically asked him not to! The nerve!
You certainly should check it out! :D
Yeah, that’s why I lost respect for Arthur Golden . . . maybe he just wanted to give credit where credit was due or just cause controversy and scandal ¬¬ Either way, Mineko’s image was tainted because of him. It’s very unfair.
I think he focused on the image of geisha during World War II or just simply named an ‘oian’ a geisha . . . I thought that was really unthoughtful, and he even majored in Japanese studies in college ¬¬ He should know better.
I hope you enjoy if you get to read it! :D
Comment by Alvy September 24, 2009 @ 7:19 am