Musashi (novel)

Musashi

US edition cover
Author Eiji Yoshikawa
Translator Charles S. Terry
Cover artist N. Ōrai
Country Japan
Language Japanese
Genre Historical novel
Publisher Asahi Shimbun
Publication date
1935
Published in English
1981
Media type Print (newspaper serial)
Pages 984 (US hardback edition)
ISBN 4-7700-1957-2 (US hardback edition)
OCLC 32830390

Musashi (宮本武蔵 Miyamoto Musashi) is a Japanese novel written by Eiji Yoshikawa. It was serialized in 1935 in the newspaper Asahi Shimbun.

Introduction

It is a fictionalized account of the life of Miyamoto Musashi, author of The Book of Five Rings and arguably the most renowned Japanese swordsman who ever lived.

The novel has been translated into English by Charles S. Terry, with a foreword by Edwin O. Reischauer, published by Kodansha International under ISBN 4-7700-1957-2.

The long epic (over 900 pages, abridged, in the English version) comprises seven "books" detailing the exploits of Miyamoto Musashi, beginning just after the battle of Sekigahara, following his journeys and the many people who become important in his life, and leading up to his climactic duel with Sasaki Kojiro on Ganryujima (Ganryu or Funa Island). Musashi becomes famous during the course of the novel as he searches for both perfection in swordsmanship and in consciousness. Innovating Japanese swordsmanship, he invents the style of simultaneously wielding both the katana and the wakizashi, something unheard of at that time in Japanese history.

Table of contents

Chapters per book

Book 1 — Earth

Book 2 — Water

Book 3 — Fire

Book 4 — Wind

Book 5 — Sky

Book 6 — Sun and Moon

Book 7 — The Perfect Light

Release details

See also

Sources, references, external links, quotations

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