The Charlotte Austin Review Ltd.
-
Women's fiction -
charlotteaustinreview.com
Home
Get Reviewed
Editor's Office
Editors
Reviewers
Interviews
Columns
Resources
Short fiction
Your letters
Editor
Charlotte Austin
Webmaster Rob Java
Review
Memoirs of a Geisha
Memoirs of a Geisha by
Arthur S. Golden

Alfred A. Knopf
434 pages, 1999
ISBN 0375400117
Reviewed by Andrea Collare



We first enter the world of Sayuri in a small fishing village off the coast of Japan. Her mother is dying, leaving her father to care for their two daughters. As was common in Japan in the earlier part of our century, Sayuri's father chooses to sell his children in hopes that they will rise to be Geisha girls. After a tearful separation with her sister, Sayuri begins her life within an okiya to which she now owes her debt.

She is but a feather in the breeze as the people that become interwoven into her life determine her destiny. Hatsumomo, the current Geisha in her okiya, immediately recognizes the beauty in Sayuri as a threat to her existence. Her every move is thereafter calculated to undercut any step of Sayuri's rise to becoming a Geisha. In the beginning, her efforts are well worth her while, until Sayuri meets a compassionate stranger whom she refers to as the "Chairman." After her encounter with the Chairman, Sayuri's luck changes. Mameha, a famous and accomplished Geisha, who also holds a special distaste for Hatsumomo, takes Sayuri under her wing and becomes her mentor and friend.

With the help of Mameha and her own charms, Sayuri achieves fame as a Geisha in the famous Gion District of Japan only to re-encounter the single love she has ever know, the Chairman. Intermingled with Japan's imminent loss in the World War and a conflict between the man she loves and the man who wishes to be her sponsor, this point is symbolic of the fall of Sayuri and Gion as the Geisha know it.

Golden makes it his mission to dispel the myths and Western misinterpretations of the life and objectives of a Geisha. He compassionately reveals the hardships, pains and relationships that develop throughout the life of the mysterious Geisha. The story is revealed in such a way that the reader does not realize he has been taught an invaluable history lesson, until one closes the cover to sit back and reflect. The author’s accuracy and expertise are immaculate and enjoyable.

Not only does this book take you to a world that no longer exists, it takes the reader on a journey of love, deceit and betrayal. The reader meets characters that have depth and consistency, and develops compassion for the players in this mysterious game of life.


© 2000 The Charlotte Austin Review Ltd., for Web site content and design, and/or writers, reviewers and artists where/as indicated.