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One Chrysanthemum

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It is 1964 and Misako Imai is a young Tokyo housewife with a secret. When she was a child living in her grandfather's dark, wartime Buddhist temple in the northern prefecture of Niigata, she became aware of a special sensitivity that allowed her to see visions of things that were currently happening - but in another place - or that had happened in the past. Now, after five years of marriage and no children, Misako is living the life of a full-time maid to her husband' s widowed mother, who blames her for not producing a son to carry on the family name. One evening, she has the very clear vision of her husband making love to another woman and realizes that he has taken a mistress. Her marital problems unresolved, Misako is summoned by her grandfather to Niigata when his temple receives the ashes of a young girl's bones that were found in a nearby garden pond. The old priest remembers his granddaughter playing in that garden as a child and telling him that she saw a girl fall into the pond. At that time there had been no evidence the sighting was anything more than the childâ s over-active imagination. But, after meeting a most unusual Zen priest who tells him about something called clairvoyance, he realizes that his own granddaughter may have had such a gift when she was a child. The old priest becomes obsessed with the possible connection between the bones found in the pond and Misako's childhood vision. Feeling that he can give into a bit of fool-hardiness in his old age, he plans an unorthodox memorial service in the garden where the bones were found and arranges for both the Zen priest and his granddaughter to attend. What he does not realize is that the combination of the two priests' limited knowledge and his granddaughter's powerful sensitivity would be a dangerous combination bound to end in disaster.

375 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 2006

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5 stars
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4 stars
20 (48%)
3 stars
7 (17%)
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Marie.
379 reviews
November 29, 2018
Tohle jsem potřebovala. Poklidné vyprávění střídá trochu dramatu, zajímavé detaily z japonského života, budhistické rituály, postavy, které si člověk může oblíbit. Trochu mi to připomíná japonskou kaligrafii - pečlivé tahy štětcem, smysl pro detail, vylíčení atmosféry, přírody a poutavý příběh k tomu. Výborné čtení, když chcete trochu zklidnit mysl a nahlédnout přitom do zvyků a obyčejů jiné kultury, nudit se nebudete.
Profile Image for Galina.
154 reviews17 followers
October 19, 2012
First I thought it will be a kind of a mystery but actually it's just a good story of the everyday life in Japan of 60-s XX century. For me it was a bit slow moving and I couldn't avoid feeling that I'm reading a foreigner who tries to push into one book everything she got to know about Japan while living there. But it's still quite interesting and the picture of life of japanese women of those times seems very realistic.
Profile Image for Consolate.
4 reviews3 followers
July 19, 2013
For me :it is good and an interesting picture of life of japanese women and life in Buddhist temple.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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