English;
Lafcadio Hearn; Houghton Mifflin Co., New York, NY, USA, 1930.
Octavo;
hardcover with orange-coloured stamped spine-titling and upper board
decoration; 240pp., monochrome frontispiece, top edge dyed orange. Small stain
to top edge; previous owner’s inscription on front free endpaper; price-clipped
dustjacket sunned along the spine; chipping to the spine head and tail but with
no loss of text or image; now protected by non-adhesive plastic.
Fans
of horror fiction realise only far too well that there is horror and there is
horror. What scares some people leaves other people cold. The same can be said
of humour: what makes some people laugh, simply offends others. The reasons are
multitudinous and varied: past experiences, different upbringings, all
contribute to various degrees of susceptibility. One of those variables is
culture.
Lafcadio
Hearn was of Greek extraction, brought up in America, and rose to become one of
the USA’s first ambassadorial representatives to Japan. What he found there
forever changed him. He returned to pen many books, translating the literature
– especially the folk- and ghost stories – of what was to become his spiritual
home country. The best known of these are Kokoro and this collection of ghost
stories and weird tales, Kwaidan.
Ghosts
in Japanese mythology have a more distinct rationale from those found in the
West. In most cases, the ghost appears to avenge a wrong done to them in their
lifetime, or to expose the guilt of a criminal third party, whereas, in Europe
say, a ghost may appear and scare onlookers without any definite cause or
rationale, and the debate as to the reason of why they are unable to rest makes
for some very pleasant ongoing fireside chats. These Japanese ‘yorei’, on the
other hand, always seem to have a clear purpose in mind.
The
book is in two sections – the first consists of spooky tales, while the second
is entitled “Insect Studies” and recalls a number of fantastic writings about
various arthropod creatures. The first tale is the story the blind musician
Hoichi, who entertains, unknowingly, the spectres of the drowned clan of the
Heike who slowly drain his energies as they force him to recount the epic songs
of their demise on a nightly basis. Priests at the temple where Hoichi is
staying try to protect him by painting his body with sutras that make him
invisible to the ghosts, but they forget to paint his ears and the ghosts,
while breaking their hold over the musician, cut off his ears as a punishment
for his desire to be rid of them.
Thereafter,
we have snow maidens, the hungry dead, reincarnated troubled wives and
wandering priests in peril. Fans of Mike Mignola’s “Hellboy” will discover the
source of one of his best strips in “Rokuro-kubi” the tale of a nest of goblins
whose heads fly off at night to forage for meaty prey. Mignola claimed that
there were elements of this tale that he couldn’t bring to the graphic
re-telling, so loyal fans (like me!) should check this out.
As
in most Japanese literature, there is not a lot of wrapping-up after the climax
has been reached: the story told, the reader is left to ponder the unspoken
elements of the narrative. This is a good thing and shows a high level of trust
by the author in the audience. It also catches the terse, haiku-like force of
the Japanese style and in this, Hearn’s sensitivity truly catches the native
origins of the work.
As
a sideline, the book was the inspiration to a 1960s movie by director Masaki Kobayashi.
The film covers several of the stories that Hearn translates as well as some
others, equally famous. Shot over more than twelve months in a giant converted
aircraft hangar, it is well worth watching for its comments on Hearn’s stories
as much as its exposition of Japanese cultural motifs in regard to their ghost
tradition.
I’m
not a fan of Cthulhu in Japan – there’s no basis for it in HPL and yet Chaosium
has two sourcebooks in print about it – but, if you’re thinking of meeting the
Mythos in that country, there’s no better place to start than with this
collection of stories.
I
give it four tentacled horrors.
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