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Women's Fiction
Memoirs of a Geisha

Memoirs of a Geisha

List Price: $49.95
Your Price: $31.47
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: An over-rated bland and boring documentary
Review: I admit that I didn't know much about the life of Japanese geisha during the first half of this century and this book provided minute details of every aspect of those girls' lives (true or false, I couldn't tell). However, I can't say that I could sympathize or even feel sorry for them for living the kind of life they were forced into. They were but a bunch of self-centered females whose main ambition in life is to rise to the highest level of their male-pleasing profession.

This book (or rather this narration of events) documents the lives and "hardships" of geisha in their quest of learning the secrets of the trade and how to always be at the beck and call of their male "customers".

I don't think Mr. Golden succeeded in dispelling the notion that geisha are not girls working in the world's oldest profession.

At the top of the list of things that I really hated about this book is the metaphors. It seems that Mr. Golden is unable to write a normal plain interesting sentence without inserting attention-distracting metaphors.

I felt that the writer himself got tired of this work of fiction. How else would you explain his hurried closing chapters?

A place among the best-seller list's top ten and almost 800 reviews with an average rating of 4.5 stars. If that's not over-rating, then I don't know what is. The lesson I learned after reading this bland and metaphor-infested documentary: never believe the best-seller list again.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Worth Reading - Slow Ending
Review: After repeated recommendations, I finally decided to give this book a try. I was completely engaged almost immediately. The description of this aspect of Japanese culture and the life of this poor girl sold into a life that is a bizzare mixture of luxury and slavery was fascinating. Once the conflict with the other geishas in her house was resolved, however, the story degenerated into a somewhat predictable love story. Still an enjoyable read, and a great source of information about a very foreign world.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An excellent read for the connoissuer of Japan.
Review: A fictional piece that chronicles the life of geisha Nitta Sayuri. Born in Yoride, a fishing village on Japan's east coast, around 1920, she was sold to Gion in Kyoto as an apprentice geisha. The memoires are alleged to have been recorded in Sayuri's New York appartment over a period of two years in the 1990's. Golden provides us with an account of the mysterious life a geisha leads at the height of its popularity before WWII, the way it survived during the Great Depression and its temporary closure near the end of the war. The Western perception of this antiquated art form is largely mistaken and we are provided with an explanation that is both harsh and forgiving. Golden is a Japanophile and his research has produced a novel that is enjoyable and eye opening. I thoroughly recommend this to anyone who has an interest in Japanese culture and/or is intending to visit Japan.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Boring!
Review: It reminded me of another boring soap opera with an extremely predictable ending. I'm sorry I wasted my money on this book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Boring!
Review: It reminded of another boring soap opera

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent!
Review: I was surprised to learn that some people didn't adore this book as much as I did. I thought it haad nothing boring, the story kept up, I couldn't put it down! I learned so much from it and it touched me so deeply. It was eloquent and beautiful and I would recommend this book to anyone!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Wonderful Journey
Review: I have just recently finished reading "Memoirs of a Geisha". It took me two weeks to read and I must say that having to put it down to go to work was a challenge. I simply couldn't put the book down. It was brilliantly written. I find it amazing that a man can write so beautifully from a woman's perspective especially a woman who is from a land that tends to be so foreign to us. I found myself wondering many times about what Sayuri would be up to next. It was a joy to read this book, I am so glad I bought it. I have recommended this book to several of my friends and they are enjoying it as well.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Does not live up to the hype
Review: Though Mr. Golden constructs a reasonably good story, he fails to energize his characters with any purpose or spirit. Sayuri's love, the driving force of the book itself and the only reason I kept reading, remains unexplained and unfulfilled right to the end. Why did she love him so much? Why did she love him at all?! Why did her rival geisha hate her so much? Sayuri herself is an unintended dichotomy. The other characters say repeatedly what a clever, witty woman she is, but the reader only sees an undecisive and pliable girl whose ultimate fate is a matter of dumb luck, not will. In an odd turn, I hope that the film version is better than book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Corny Corny Corny
Review: The information was fascinating but the groaners! They kept coming and coming and coming like the waves breaking on the shores of our island, Japan. Like a hungry tiger at the edge of a herd. Like the hummingbird dipping at the nectar of a beautifully blooming flower....

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Well researched and full of details.
Review: I found the book to be very good over-all. The research and attention to detail was excellent. I probably could not have found a better book to read, if I wanted to learn about the Geisha culture. I was disappointed, though, that although 'written' as a true story, it was, in fact, purely fiction. Also, the book was fairly predictable, and full of cliche. Still, overall I found it enjoyable reading.


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