The Pillow Book is probably the most widely read Japanese classic work in the West. Written as an intimate diary by Sei Shonagon, in the service of the empress, it allows us to access the refined court of Heian and shows us, without qualms, the delights, concerns, whims and predilections of a unique writer. These pages, which pulverize centuries and cultural distances, narrate life in the imperial court of Japan at the end of the tenth century through the eyes of an exceptional woman—intelligent, mischievous, perhaps somewhat vain, but of delicate sensitivity and boundless talent. A book that shows that the classics are not classics because academics say so but because, for many centuries that pass, they are still fresh as the first day. "Sei Shonagon's prose is transparent. Through it we see a world miraculously suspended in itself, near and remote at the same time, as if enclosed in...read more