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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Memoirs of a Geisha, by Arthur Golden

I wasnt born and raised to be a Kyoto geisha girl... Im a fisher patchs daughter from a little town called Yoroido on the sea of Japan. Beginning in a poor fishing village in 1929, Memoirs of a geisha girl chronicles the life of nine-year-old Chiyo, born with blue-gray eyes, and exchange with her sister into the slave life of being a geisha after her mothers death. Lost in this new world where a girls virginity is sold to the highest bidder, Chiyo works as a servant in the okiya of Hatsumomo until she is taken under of wing of Hatsumomos archenemy Mameha, another powerful and graceful geisha in another okiya. After years of aeonian drama, extensive schooling on entertaining men, ducking Hatsumomos wrath, and losing a best friend, Chiyo becomes Sayuri, one of the most successful geisha ever... further to lose it all again.

The first time Arthur deluxes Memoirs of a geisha came to my attention was when I saw the cover of the book and a brief description in Cosmopolitan magazine both years ago. Although I was interested in the refreshing, I was indecisive to read it because I dont generally like books with cultural and amative references, however, from page one I knew that I was in for the presbyopic haul.

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Written like a work of poetry, Memoirs of a Geisha carries the reader through a complete range of emotions, the novel is a ride over the highest hills and mountains and back down again. What I found most intriguing was that this book is actually scripted by a man, but really explores the life, emotions, and trials of a adult female so accurately and fully. It is hard to believe that a man could write a novel so deep and moving. Golden employed none of the literary devices that...

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