"A magnificent historical novel extolling the virtues and exposing the vices of human beings." —Sajed Kamal, author, artist, and sustainability educatorThe Untold Story of the Christian Rebellion That Changed Japanese HistorySpring Castle is the epic story of Japan's bloody Shimabara Rebellion, told through the eyes of the Japanese peasants and former samurai who rose up against oppression with extraordinary bravery. Facing religious persecution, merciless taxation, drought and famine, 37,000 ordinary men, women and children led by a charismatic teenage boy named Shiro Masuda occupy an abandoned castle, only to be ruthlessly slaughtered by the Shogun's army.
History books have retold this story countless times, but renowned novelist Michiko Ishimure spent fifty years imaginatively reconstructing the lives, thoughts, fears and dreams of the forgotten people who perished that day—likely including her own ancestors. With great sensitivity, Ishimure depicts the religious awakening and struggles of a large cast of characters who gradually come to recognize that they have no choice but to fight for their freedom and dignity.
As translator Bruce Allen writes, "Ishimure devoted her life to telling the stories of people whose lives were threatened by society's desire for material progress. This book provides a requiem for the victims of this process, along with a call for recognition, reconciliation, and renewal."
About the Author:Michiko Ishimure (1927-2018) is regarded as one of Japan's most important modern writers. She published over 50 works ranging from novels, non-fiction, Noh drama and poetry to essays, memoirs and children's stories. She received numerous international and Japanese literary awards including the Ramon Magsaysay Award from the Philippines (1973) and the Asahi Prize for literature in Japan (2001). Her best-known work,
Paradise in the Sea of Sorrow; Our Minamata Disease (1969), was reprinted over 30 times in Japan and has been translated into English and several other languages. This work, along with several other books focusing on the Minamata Disease incident, led to her being known as the "mother of the Japanese environmental movement" and the "Rachel Carson of Japan."
Bruce Allen is retired Professor of translation and global environmental literature at Seisen University in Tokyo. His translations include Michiko Ishimure's novel
Lake of Heaven, Japanese Tales of Fantasy and Folklore, and
Toward the Paradise of Flowers, a documentary film on Ishimure. He is editor of
Ishimure Michiko's Writing in Ecological Perspective: Between Sea and Sky. His translation of several chapters of
Spring Castle was recognized by the Kyoko Iriye Selden Memorial Translation Prize of Cornell University.