Confessions of a Yakuza
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Author | Junichi Saga |
---|---|
Original title (if not in English) | 浅草博徒一代 Asakusa baku ichidai |
Translator | John Bester |
Country | Japan |
Language | English |
Publisher | Kodansha |
Released | 1991 |
Media Type | |
Pages | 253 |
ISBN | 4770019483 |
Confessions of a Yakuza (浅草博徒一代 Asakusa baku ichidai?) is a book by Japanese doctor and author Junichi Saga (1991). It recounts a series of stories from the life of Eiji Ijichi, a former Yakusa boss, as told to his doctor in the last months of his life.
The book starts with the teenage Ijichi running away from his family home in Utsunomiya to Tokyo, to find a judge's mistress who he was having an affair with. The book follows Ijichi through his first job at a family coal merchants in the then distict of Fukagawa, his various mistresses and treatment for syphilis, the 1923 Great Kanto earthquake, his initiation into the gang that controlled gambling in the Asakusa entertainment area, his various streches in prison, his overseas service in occupied Korea in the 1920s, his rise to the boss of the gang, and his experiences during and after World War II.
The book paints a colourful picture life in Japan in the first half of the 20th century, the structure and customs of a yakuza gang, gambling sessions, and prison and army life.
[edit] Characters
Eiji Ijichi: a dying Yakusa boss in his 70s, who recounts various stories from his past to his doctor.
Junichi Saga: Ijichi's doctor, who spent many hours with Ijichi over a period of months towards the end of his life, taping his reminiscenes. Saga's main role in the book is to introduce some of the stories with descriptions of the older Ijichi as he recounts them.
[edit] Bob Dylan
It was reported that many lines from Bob Dylan's 2001 album Love and Theft were "borrowed" from the novel.