Shusaku Endo Books
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quickly to my doorReview Date: 2008-03-10
The Honor of GodReview Date: 2008-02-26
These questions lie at the heart of Silence. Written in the wake of World War two by the Japanese novelist Shusaku Endo, Silence tells the story of the persecution of Christians in seventeenth century Japan.
Although proselytizing efforts by Francis Xavier had been successful in the previous century, the 1600s brought about ecclesiastical quarrels between Roman catholic and protestant missionaries. These squabbles often went hand in hand with political and military shenanigans between competing European powers in Japan. Japan's leadership came to view Christianity as an essential part of this distasteful western mess, and severe persecution quickly became standard fare for the newly budded Japanese church.
Endo's protagonist, the young Portugese priest Sebastian Rodrigues, enters Japan secretly in the midst of these persecutions, along with a monastic colleague, Francis Garrpe. They encounter crude but strong faithfulness among the Japanese believers, who undertake great sacrifice in order to protect the padres from the authorities.
Eventually, however, they are betrayed by a weak-willed Japanese Christian, and their trials begin in earnest. Rodrigues's faith is tested to limits which comfortable modern western Christians may never be able to properly understand. His captors torture him psychologically in order to make him renounce his faith. This is not a simple temptation or test of honor; it is not Rodrigues's mere conscience at stake. If he submits to the authorities by trampling on Christ's portrait, his peasant flock goes free. If he does not, they will be tortured to death.
This test is one of the most soul-churning passages of literature I have read. What will Rodrigues do? Will he apostatize? How important is his honor? How important is God's? As the pastor of these simple peasants, is it better to renounce his faith to save their lives, or better to embrace martyrdom and doom them?
Initially, I found myself cheering for Rodrigues's perseverance and martyrdom, but by the novel's end, I was shaken and unsure. In the West, Christendom has a long and hallowed tradition of persecution stories, from the early believers in Jerusalem, to the church in Rome, and in various places throughout the centuries. Although Christ gives approbation to those who are persecuted for his sake, human sinfulness, such as it is, can even distort the meaning and value of martyrdom. Even the brightest lights in Christian history sometimes succumb to an unspiritual triumphalism. With the benefit of time, we often come to see some of Christendom's triumphs as accreted with sin and pride.
The first believers in Japan did not have this cultural background narrative to inform their consciences. They had only an immediate pagan background confronted with the fresh, non-accreted startling news that God has suffered, endured shame and humiliation, and forgiven their sins. This gospel surely would have motivated them to endure great persecution, but at the same time, the gospel is the story of a man who suffered in order to release his friends from condemnation. In that light, martyrdom for its own sake is dubious at best.
What is true religion? The bible maintains that true religion consists in looking after orphans and widows in their distress, and keeping oneself from being stained by the world. Those two mandates, it seems to me, should never be at odds with one another. If Rodrigues had refused to trample on the fumie (the term for the sacred image of Christ), he would definitely not have been looking after orphans and widows, but rather sending them to certain doom. However, would his simple act constitute "being stained by the world?" Would he be a Judas and an enemy of the gospel? There is a prominent strain of Christianity, very much in the tradition of the western theology of glory, which says "yes". Endo's answer, more in tune with the theology of the cross, is "no".
I am inclined to agree with the latter.
Overestimation of natives vs. Underestimation of foreinersReview Date: 2007-11-29
1. Two Roman Catholic priets/missionaries from Portugal crossing dangerous oceans to reach Japan. Then giving up everything:Pride,
faith, freedom, and love(?)
2. Courageous Native Christians. Accepting their martyrdom with silence.
There is no balance between these two. There is no reality.
This is a book written by a Japanese for Japanese readers.
Awesome bookReview Date: 2007-10-25
This book is about the missionary activities in Japan back in the 1500s and 1600s. What would YOU do if you were faced with the choice of stepping on the face of Christ or allow other people to suffer?
Read the book -- and be prepared to THINK! It's worth every second you spend in it!
Fascinating, chilling, and inexplicably uplifting novelReview Date: 2007-10-03
I am a Catholic and this is my go-to book during times when I experience those periods of doubt and despair. This may surprise people who know that this is not a happy-ending book and the spiritual lessons in it are harsh and stand in sharp contrast to the smug blathering that characterizes so much of American Christian life ("We're not perfect, just forgiven." "God doesn't give us anything we can't handle," etc.) And the question that haunted Endo--whether the fate of a religion is bound up in the culture and history of a given land--is fully fascinating and goes to the very nature of the whole of missionary endeavor. (And, in these times, one wonders if there is a parallel in the political questions related to the applicability of democracy to any land and any people.) "Silence" is a painful read, but an indispensable masterpiece.

READS LIKE A HAIKUReview Date: 2007-06-18
Reading Shusaku Endo's Sea and Poison was such a delightful experience I was reluctant to close the book. Granted, it is sad to read about cruel and heartless experiments on living human beings but that is not what the book is about. From the vantage point of Japanese/Christian culture Endo courageously shines his compassionate light into the dark crevices of our souls and makes us confront our own demons nesting there. In doing so he helps us become better persons. Robert Wright in his often quoted The Moral Animal points out that "Human beings are a species splendid in their array of moral equipment, tragic in their propensity to misuse it, and pathetic in their constitutional ignorance of the misuse." Endo does us a service by diminishing our "constitutional ignorance of the misuse" [of our moral equipment]"
Endo traces the inner development of his characters with such a deep understanding of the human condition that I was astounded and moved to tears and joy. He placed two aspiring medical doctors, Toda and Sugura in a University hospital in southern Japan now seemingly under the control of the military establishment. The end of the Japanese/American war was quickly approaching. Daily bombing of the nearby city flattened the city and killed thousands of civilians and gave rise to implacable hatred directed towards two enemy airmen the military captured and brought to the hospital for experiments to determine how much could be surgically removed from a person before the person died. Toda and Sugura are assigned to assist the chief medical doctor who controls the future of the two aspiring doctors. Endo explores how Toda and Sugura deal with the conflicting demands of society, the medical establishment the nation and their conscious. Endo gently opens a window into their souls and allows us to witness the mighty clash between the demands of self preservation and the importuning of their conscious.
Endo writes so evocatively, with such elegance and grace and without a trace of judgment or preaching it was like reading a book length haiku. I recommend that the readers read Bushido the Soul of Japan by Inazo Nitobe, (it's in the public domain and several sources allow a free download). Reading Inazo gave me a deeper and broader understanding of Endo's perspective and I intend to return to reading his books.
Info on Film VersionReview Date: 2001-07-14
Crime and PunishmentReview Date: 2000-05-10
There is a sequel to The Sea and Poison. I do not believe that it is published in the United States, but it is about Dr. Suguro's later life. People judge him and punish him under the name of "democracy" and its "justice." Dr. Suguro ends up hanging himself. Can people judge and punish others? If judging and blaming are the meaning of justice, how does it differ from what is unjust?
I am Japanese, and I personally think that Endo is the best writer from our country. I strongly recommend all his work to Americans.
War - what is it good for?Review Date: 2004-11-22
The Only Thing Necessary for the Triumph of EvilReview Date: 2006-06-02
Contrary to another review, "The Sea and Poison" is not based on the activities of Unit 731 in Manchuria at all. The novel is based on the vivisection of 8 B29 crewmen at Fukuoka Imperial University. These experiments involved removal of lung tissue, puncturing hearts and other experiments, while the airmen were alive. None survived the experiments.
Returning to the novel, Endo focuses on a medical intern, Suguro, and his friend Toda. Both characters represent very different responses to the proposal to vivisect the airmen. Toda feels no guilt or remorse, and has no issue with taking part. It is not even matter of justifying it to hinmself: he just has little response in his conscience. Suguro, on the other hand, is flooded with doubt, ethical problems, and his own conscience. Shown to be a basically kind man, the novel reinforces Burke's suggestion that all evil needs is for good men to do nothing.
A burning look into the morality of the passive, "The Sea and Poison" will challenge and provoke. Despite its brevity, it packs a punch, and will leave you thinking for long after you have turned the last page. As usual, Endo has written a fantastic novel with real weight.
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a touch of post modernismReview Date: 2007-12-22
A wonderful novel. A great novel. A very enjoyable read.
Darkly SurprisingReview Date: 2006-11-08
"Scandal" is very much full of self-references to Endo's own life. The main character, Suguro, is a Christian author, who has written novels called "The Life of Christ", "The Voice of Silence" and so on. Fans will recognise the echos to Endo's other works. Additionally, the characters often share names with other Endo novels. Suguro also appears in "The Sea and Poison", the highschool girl Morita Mitsu comes from "The Girl I Left Behind" and Naruse comes from the pages of "Deep River", (though with a changed given name, but life details are similar).
The similarity to Endo's other works ends there, however, and "Scandal" takes a no-holds-barred look at the depravity of the human heart and the urges that lie suppressed by the individual. As Suguro hears repeated rumours that he visits some extremely questionably places in Tokyo, he begins a hunt for the presumed imposter. Along the way, he encounters much that is disturbing about himself.
"Scandal" is a book that looks unflinchingly into the darkest recesses of the human heart. Endo seems unafraid to address those issues some would prefer to be hidden away, and he makes us look at them in ways that might make us feel uncomfortable. While not shocking in the explicit sense, the book does succeed in making one feel a touch uncomfortable with the matters dealt with. Endo shows a great deal of understanding for the nature of sexuality.
Although I would not recommend the book for everyone, I would recommend it for fans of Endo and those interested in the secret desires of people and the concealed corners of our own souls. This is an excellent book.
Worth a lifetime of rereadingReview Date: 2006-01-26
Shusaku Endo uses this story as a kind of autobiography, accurate in depth of feeling, if not character and circumstance. He said in his A Life of Jesus that he thought of the Gospels as collectively forming a true portrait of Jesus, even where he saw them as fuzzy on the details. That is a good way to read Scandal, as a portrait of Endo.
Suguro struggles with old age, oncoming death, and the dissonance between his private self and his public reputation as an upstanding Christian. In many ways, Suguro is forced to confront himself; he learns that the foundations he has built his life upon are unsound, even his work, his marriage, and his religion. Endo's unflinching portrayal of himself in the figure of Suguro is thus poignant and, at times, tragic.
Scandal is about, among other things, a man going to a dangerous, uncertain place with his religion. Some religious people will not want to follow him there. On the other hand, this is not an exclusively Christian novel, and readers of any religion, or none, would have much to gain from it.
It is helpful, but not necessary, to have read some of Endo's other work to put Scandal in context. Silence and A Life of Jesus are classics. At least ten other works are in English translation.
Scandal is so rich and complex, and finally, so human, that it practically requires a second reading. But I am beginning to find that each time I read it, I demand another reading myself. I doubt that I will ever come to the end of it.
Good and EvilReview Date: 2002-02-07
Mr. Endo poses a variety of questions for the reader. As I previously mentioned, the main question is the level of good and evil in all of us. He seems to suggest that those of us who worship Jesus have within us the potential to have been one of those who stoned Jesus on His way to the Cross. While this is a shocking proposition to many, Endo's tale leaves one pondering the issue.
This book, like the other two I've read (including "The Sea and Poison"), is written in a compelling style that moves the reader along without any literary roadblocks. Even though you may quess correctly at some of the outcome, you want to see how the author gets you there. I rated this a "4" instead of a "5" because it fell a bit short of "Silence" so I knew he could do better.
deep and thought-provokingReview Date: 2002-03-09
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curiosityReview Date: 2001-03-11
Loved itReview Date: 2002-08-20
This was a great story by one of Japan's finest writersReview Date: 1999-10-28
Great bookReview Date: 2006-08-17
His characters always act from weakness and sorrow and struggle and failure. Gaston, the socially inept, the ugly, the slow-minded, reaching out to Japan with the most powerful thing in the world, love, but covered in a ball of rags.
Like Scandal this novel contained characters deeply effected by warcrimes that those close to them had participated in. The hitman Endo (Endo likes to make the criminal characters reflect identity with him in some way in some of his novels, naming the hitman Endo or making the main character of Scandal a Christian writer, like Endo, of a Life of Christ.) turns to a life of hatred and coldblooded murder when faced with his brother's having carried out orders to burn the occupants of a village and the brother's subsequent framing by his commanding officers. Gaston persistantly, doggedly, beyond all civil tepid-ity, urges Endo from a position of weakness not to go through with his plot of revenge on the officers. Gaston, despite his outer weakness and failure, is a real man, as the character Takamori discerns, because he takes a stand for the right thing despite his weaknesses that he could have so easily taken as excuses not to do what he should. It is integrity to the gospel that Endo has witnessed, bears witness to, keeps within himself. The "fool" is wonderful for this integrity, this sacred obedience, this longsuffering love, which endures blows and persecutions by the ones he is trieing to help, and which has takes the courage to recognize that he can and must help, that he must, despite all his weakness and absurdity in the eyes of the world, come to Japan for love. Hallelujah!
Endo ends by tieing Gaston's mysterious end into the early Japanese story, "The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter."
Only a real fool would pass this one upReview Date: 2005-03-28
You have maybe met someone like Gaston Bonaparte? The sort of man who apologizes when you step on his foot; who'd rather be cheated than think someone dishonest. Who is, naturally, held in a sort of weary pity by his family and in complete scorn by almost anyone else.
Endo addresses in this novel what it is that world values and what it does to a man who who is apart from those values. While the rest of the world cannily pursues it's own ends (survival, or better, and reproduction) Gaston is --quite unintentionally--pursuing that proffession which is revered in name but entirely held in contempt in actual practice. Gaston is maybe not a man who is good for much, certainly not in the world's eyes -but sainthood has ever been the most egalitarian of vocations.
There is a powerful case made for man's free will implicitly in this, but also in the novel's character, Endo, who is the opposite and the reflection of Gaston. He too though, is pursuing his end regardless of even himself -to the extent of refusing to take antibiotics for a tuberculosis infected lung.
Perhaps the novel's most poignant theme is it's message that even at our most debased and broken, God has not forgotten or given up on us. Endo's illustration of this is original and startling; Gaston chooses to follow after Endo at a cost and in a way that could only be called insane by anyone the world would call sane.
Endo's writing is simple and elegant and executed in an exciting, almost cinematic manner. It keeps the reader turning the pages through the book's all too short duration. If I had to say something critical about this book, I might mention that the writing is not as smooth as some of Endo's later works -it lacks subtlety at moments and there are plot possibilites which are raised and not pursued. That is just nothing though, to the whole of how wonderful this book really is.

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Prophetic Mandate and the ArtistReview Date: 2007-08-16
The primary audience for this book is the Christian artist. That said, I am Christian but not an artist (at least not in the traditional sense); I work as a software engineer; but maybe I am a poet at heart: because Steve Scott's book nudged at my heart and mind. His book needs to be widely read.
The book titles itself a collection of essays, and you could pick and choose which to read in whatever order; but there is a flow and order in their presentation, and the collection is best read from beginning to end ... like a book of chapters. Some of the text toward the beginning was the driest for me (how to look at art so you can form a response, or rather, how different personalities and cultures respond to art). But don't stop too soon. This chapter is important background. Read it and move on to the meat.
You can consider the 'Crying for a Vision' book to be a guidebook for the Christian artist. Not a guidebook with all the answers, but an aid for you that asks so many questions. And if Steve Scott's writing doesn't provide you with all the questions, then the study guide appendix should satisfy. It is not a book to be blown through like a NY Times Bestseller novel. Take some time to chew on it.
One thing that I took away from reading this book is the importance of a sense of wonder. The writer who has most influenced me, G.K. Chesterton, had this sense of wonder in his life and in his art; so this element is often in my mind. Scott's book reminded me of the need for Christians to evangelize through this sense of wonder (the apostolate of wonder??) when he wrote: "I believe that Christian artists can take on the prophetic mandate in their work, and confront more deeply than others who try." It is needed in our post-grunge world.
Walking On Water Wasn't Built in a DayReview Date: 2007-04-27
Second, a few reviews of this book are now out, particularly one by Chris Well in CCM, where he called it a "must- read" and quoted Steve Turner, author of The Gospel According to the Beatles, from the editorial review above. There's also one where Peter Banks, keyboardist for UK rock/ pop band, After the Fire, known for the songs, "Der Kommissar", "Laser Love" and "One Rule for You" said, "A uniquely gifted musical poet? One thing you cannot do with Steve Scott is categorise him".
Nigel Goodwin wrote that Steve Scott's previous book, Like a House on Fire: Renewal of the Arts in a Postmodern Culture, "gives fresh light and insight into how not to retreat into the margins of postmodern analysis. This book is a wake-up call for the Church and will shake the arts world to its foundational roots." Dr. Colin Harbinson called that book "timely and thought- provoking", and wrote that it "inspires us to abandon our ethnocentric worldviews and embrace the arts as a bridge to other cultures. This is especially relevant as Scott is currently director of CANA (Christian Artists Networking Association) which holds conferences in Asia, Africa, India, Bali, and other parts of the majority or third world.
These comments also hold for the present book, as Scott says in the introduction that "All the material in this book in your hands (Crying) either leads up to the Fire material, flows around it, or builds upon the ideas sketched in that book. This book and Like a House on Fire complement each other, and read together, provide a fair picture of my ideas and opinions. There's also an essay in Artrageous from arts workshops/ seminars Scott did at the Cornerstone festival.
Part one of this book contains the entirety of Crying for a Vision, Steve's exploration of art and creativity in relation to the Bible, the church, and the world. Four new essays in part two show Steve's way of working as an artist. Part three provides a sixty question study guide for the book for use in arts groups and individual study. Steve wrote a new introduction, and in a brief interview comments on the "state of the arts". He also did a new interview about the book at alivingdog and has an essay in the new edition of It Was Good, a collection of ruminations about faith and art. So let me invite you, in my best Ed Sullivan voice, to meet him. "Ladies and gentlemen, Steve Scott."
Contents:
Introduction: A Horse of a Hundred Colors
Part One: Crying for a Vision
1. Are You Responsible for This Monstrosity?
2. The Act of Seeing With One's Own Eyes
3. How Can You Use Something That Leaks?
4. Nothing More Than Dirt?
5. Freedom, Power, and Creativity
6. Living Sacrifice/ Transformed Mind
7. Where Language Ends?
8. Towards a Lost Wax Mind
9. Only a Beginning
Part Two: Scratching the Surface
10. The Light By Which We See
11. Crossing the Boundaries
12. Fear and Multicultural Trembling
13. When Worlds Collide: The Novels of Shusaku Endo
Part Three: Work in Progress
14. Emotional Tourist: An Interview with Steve Scott
15. Crying for a Vision Study Guide
16. Endnotes

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Five By EndoReview Date: 2000-08-29
In these five stories -- Unzen, A Fifty-Year-Old Man, Japanese In Warsaw, The Box, and The Case of Isobe -- Endo draws back the curtain on a group of people obsessed with such themes as cowardice, sex, martyrdom, death and the love of animals.
With bleak eloquence and hard-edged compassion, Endo creates a banquet of irony and emotion that succeeds in filling the void created by 95% of modern fiction.
If you are weary of the predictable and formulaic fiction churned out by the big publishing houses, I recommend this slim volume. Shusaku Endo's stories feel like a gust of cold, clean and pungent mountain air from the top of Japan's highest mountains.
Five Easy Pieces, Vintage EndoReview Date: 2001-02-06

Essential readingReview Date: 2003-10-21
The plot revolves around Suguro, a physician who is also at the center of Endo's earlier novel "The Sea and Poison." Suguro was forced by the circusmtance of war to participate in medical experiments on POWs during WW2 (that is the subject of "The Sea and Poison"). "Song of Sadness" revisits him thirty years later, when he is at work in a small clinic in Tokyo's Shinjuku district. An ambitious, self-righteous journalist seeks to expose him, under the pretense of writing a disinterested series of articles about aging war criminals. But that is only one element of a very complex plot, which interweaves four or five stories to make a kind of total portrait of life in Tokyo in the changing 1970s.
The novel tackles a number of big questions having to do with medical ethics, war guilt, the possibility of forgiveness, but its touch is always deft and gentle, and there are real moments of humor in it that display Endo's wide range (from the tragic to the satirical to the comic).
The translation is among the best ever done of Endo's work--vivid, nuanced, and smooth. In a word, this novel is simply essential reading.

reflecting at the gangesReview Date: 2008-04-27
Endo surrounds the story on five main characters. Might they lead their own separate paths, they have found themselves ventured in a land so foreign to their mind-frame for a purpose they might not be able to justify logically. There is Isobe, who was seeking for his dead wife reincarnated. Numada, who had went all the way to India to pay homage to a bird he believed has died in place of him. Mitsuko is a woman who never felt loved or alive and wanted to reconcile her past to Otsu, a former college "loser"--who desired to become a priest, but was rejected by the Catholic Church--whom she never was able to escape the wrong she has done him, but was drawn to him for reasons she never could understand. And Kiguchi, a former World War II veteran who was seeking for inner peace from the former horrors of deaths he had experienced.
This story can be view as a challenge taken by the author over the Western theological and cultural ideals, particular the Catholic Christian. I believe he has deliberately posed the question of just what might salvation look in light of his characters' long-sufferings. Death is an inevitable and inescapable part of life, and in order to attain wholeness, one needs face of his/her pain. As Otsu--whom I could rightly call Mitsuko's "object of rejection" than of affection--responds to Mitsuko's indignation over his choice in life, he speaks of his savior's death and rejection as the key to humanity's transgression. It was the betrayal by mankind that made Christ's message so powerful, for "as a result, he was etched into each of their guilty hearts, and they were never able to forget him...He died, but he was restored to life in their hearts"(Deep River 185). Endo reinforced his point by noting Otsu has not the "fluid flavored rhetoric," whose convictions can go no further than his lips, rather "Otsu's words were substantiated by the life of misfortune he had led" (Deep River 185). While the story ended in an unresolved peak, I wonder what he seeking to communicate, and just what might he want for those to take from the thresholds of life to his readers? Regardless, whether it is pain or healing, rejection or forgiveness, Endo has successfully woven a story that connects life to death and rebirth.
Great bookReview Date: 2002-09-14
There is great significance in each of the characters. Ostu being a Christ figure, the Sanjos representing the "Westernized" Japanese who are almost ignorant of the Indian culture and religion. Although I cannot agree with some of the worldviews discussed in the novel, it's a great book and the most symbolistic book I have read in years.
It is no accident that Ostu gave God the name of "Onion." An onion has several layers to it. Ostu believed that the God of Christianity was also the God of Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, etc. This is where I give this book 4 stars instead of 5. The God of the Old and New Testaments cannot be the same as the ones of Buddhism, Hinduism, etc.
TremendousReview Date: 2007-01-30
Searching for Peace in an Expanded HorizonReview Date: 2004-08-19
Shusaku Endo is a Japanese Christian who writes challengely about his own faith. To me, the core of his message in "Deep River" is the universal nature of faith and the universal nature of God. He exists for all of us but we come to know Him through the religion of our culture. Thus the Hindus, Christians, Moslems, Buddhists, etc are all seeking the same ultimate oneness with God (i.e.; peace) but they are each traveling different paths outlined through them in a theology passed along through the millennia. To illustrate his point, Endu shows us the five seperate tales of redemption and has them all come to salvation at a Hindu holy site. God DOES work in mysterious ways.
A global odysey originating in Japan, culminates in IndiaReview Date: 2003-07-19
Looking at a few quotes extracted from a dialogue between two Japanese characters in the novel will give you a sense of the encounters and re-encounters between individuals and the cross-cultural encounters, all of which are a strong feature of the play. In this dialogue which takes place in Paris, a Japanese woman talks to Otsu, one of the main characters who became a Christian early in his life in Japan.
The woman declares: "...It makes my teeth stand on edge just to think of you as a Japanese believing in this European Christianity nonsense." Otsu replies: "I've been here three years. For three years I have lived here and I have tired of the way people think. The ways of thinking that they've kneaded with their own hands and fashioend to meet the workings of their hearts..they're ponderous to an Asian like me. I can't blend in with them. And so everyday is hell for me..."
The reader of this novel who is not Japanese will gain some interesting insights into how Japanese might react to these different cultural settings, as characters move from Japan to France to the United States, and finally meet in India. Endo delivers a very personal sense of cross-cultural encounters, recognizable to those of us who have gone through similar journeys in different parts of the world.
Since I have only read Japanese novels in translation into either English or French, I cannot fairly judge Endo's style against other Japanese writers who are also well known to foreign readers, like Mishima and Kawabata. But while Endo may not share the grace and delicacy of these writers, his novels, including this one, are very human, and bring us very close to the inner lives of his characters.
If you want to better understand how Japanese come to view the rest of the world, or more generally how different cultures can collide, Endo's novels and his characters are a good place to start, or to continue, your journey.

meaningful historical fictionReview Date: 2008-02-05
An spiritual tripReview Date: 2006-03-24
A small masterpieceReview Date: 2007-01-26
It is a book written by a (Christian) Japanese, in which Japan is not regarded as the end of them all, instead it contrasts - many times negatively - to other parts of the world. In these pages you can find people for which adopting a religion is just a means for better business, where earthly life is everything that matters. And yet, there are also people who found happiness, and act divine while still in a human body.
There is a Spanish priest who is very proud and acts selfish while pretending - even to himself - to be following the orders of God, and there is the samurai - the title character - who has nothing to do with Christianity, and yet has probably lived by it his whole life. They both come to a better understanding of life just when theirs ends.
After reading The Samurai I couldn't help to compare it with Clavell's Shogun: this one is written by a Japanese trying to see the good parts in other countries, Shogun is written by a Westerner who found in medieval Japan a much superior civilization. Read them both! They are masterpieces!
Very Good!Review Date: 2006-05-26
The Simple and the GrandioseReview Date: 2006-01-25

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Jesus and His lifeReview Date: 2008-03-13
Speculative (non)fiction or heartfelt plea?Review Date: 2007-02-10
It's unforunate then that he should spend so much time trying to downplay the supernatural aspects of Jesus' life and Christianity in general. In conclusion he states that "the human condition is not to be curcumscribed by tangible facts" - yet for much of the book he tries on a number of admitedly speculative theories in an effort to rationalize events recounted in the synoptic texts. Considering that many Japanese people are comfortable with Buddhist concepts such as transmigration or Shinto ideas concerning ancestors and spirit worship it's hard to imagine that they would need pages and pages of exposition to arrive at the simple message "love your neighbour as you love yourself". Western critics are quick to point out that the Japanese are not religious simply because they don't practice in a fashion comparable to those in the West. While this may be true their acceptance of a supernatural realm cannot be argued. Why then does Endo spend so much time on this issue?
It almost seems as if he's trying to rationalize his own faith and gets sidetracked with his intended goal. Issues like the virgin birth, stating that Jesus was John the Baptist's "disciple", the feeding of 5000, the account of Lazarus and countless other literal interpretations do little to serve his ultimate goal. The most baffling apology of all is Endo's account of the resurrection which states that the disciples merely concocted this story out of guilt for selling out Jesus to the Sandhedrin. Again he further dilutes his message to embolden his narrative.
Harsh criticism aside, this book is very well written and paints a unique picture of the man Jesus Christ. If nothing else it's thought provoking and well paced. Considering the miniscule impact it seems to have had on Japanese society, Endo would probably consider this work a failure. On the whole though it's another voice and another opinion. If Japan is to ever embrace Christianity they'll likely need more Endos delivering impassioned pleas such as that found in "A Life of Jesus".
The man - not the GodReview Date: 2003-12-30
This book is NOT about Christ, the supernatural being who was developed in the decades and centuries afterward. This is, ultiamtely, a very human story of a man, his life and times. Endo himself asks the question that so many recent critics and observers have pondered. Consider, the various books in the New Testament were written decades after the death of Jesus by people who never saw him. They were composed not as historical documents but as religious aids for the faithful. Knowing all this, how can we ever know the historical Jesus?
Endo asks the question then goes on to give this remarkable story of a remarkable life. No deep theology or arguing about the nature of God or the mystery of the Trinity - just a simple moving story of a life.
A Bible Major's PerspectiveReview Date: 2003-07-11
Also, having lived in Japan for half a year, finding love with a Japanese woman, and having plans of living there in one year, this book helps us step out of the otherwise American/Westernized picture of Jesus which the community of biblical scholars - who are mainly white and upper-middle class men - has developed.
If you are ready for a vividly real, honest, and (most likely) accurate examination of Jesus' life, pick up a copy today!
Jesus for the JapaneseReview Date: 2007-06-01
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