The Sound of Waves
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The Sound of Waves (1954) is a Japanese novel written by celebrated Japanese post-war author Yukio Mishima. It is a coming of age novel detailing the maturity of protagonist Shinji, a poor fisherman on the remote island of Uta-jima, and his romance with Hatsue, the beautiful daughter of the wealthy ship-owner Terukichi.
Shinji Kubo lives with his mother, a pearl diver, and his younger brother, Hiroshi. He and his mother support the family because Shinji's father had died in a previous war. However, the family lives a somewhat peaceful life and Shinji is content to be a fisherman along with a master fisher, Jukichi, and another apprentice, Ryuji.
Things change when Terukichi Miyata, after the death of his son, decides to bring back the daughter he adopted away. Raised as a pearl diver from another island, the beautiful Hatsue wins many admirers, including Shinji, in part because Terukichi intends to adopt her husband as his own son since his own son died. Shinji and Hatsue soon fall in love.
When Chiyoko, the daughter of the Lighthouse-Keeper and his wife, returns from studying at a university in Tokyo, she is disappointed to discover Shinji, whom she has affections for, has fallen in love with someone else. She takes advantage of the jealousy Yasuo Kawamoto, an arrogant and selfish admirer of Hatsue, has for Shinji and uses so Yasuo will spread vicious rumours of Shinji stealing away Hatsue's virtue (virginity).
This results in his being banned from seeing Hatsue, though through Jukichi and Ryuji, Shinji's mentor and fellow apprentice respectively, the two manage to continue communicating with one another. Terukichi steadfastly refuses to see Shinji for an explanation and when Shinji's mother, who knows her son will never deliberately lie, goes to see Terukichi, Terukichi's refusal to see her only increases the tension between Shinji and Hatsue. Chiyoko, before returning to Tokyo, becomes filled with remorse after Shinji off-handedly replies that she is pretty when she asks him if he thinks she is unattractive. She returns to Tokyo with guilt that she ruined Shinji's chance at happiness.
Eventually, the rumours die out, in part because the other pearl divers, which include Shinji's mother, clearly see that Hatsue is still virgin. Hatsue manages to win Shinji's mother's favour when Hatsue wins an abalone catching contest in order to win a handbag for Shinji's mother as an apology for her father's behavior.
Terukichi mysteriously employs Yasuo and Shinji on one of his shipping vessels. When the vessel is caught in a storm, Shinji’s courage and willpower allow him to brave the storm and save the ship. Terukichi's intentions are revealed when Chiyoko's mother receives a letter from Chiyoko, who refuses to return home, explaining that she feels she cannot return and see Shinji unhappy because she was the one who started the rumours. The Lighthouse-Keeper's wife confronts Terukichi, who reveals that he intends to adopt Shinji as Hatsue's husband. Employing the boys on the ship had been a test to which one was most suitable for his daughter and Shinji's act to save the vessel had earned Terukichi’s respect and permission to wed his daughter.
For this book Mishima was awarded the Shincho Prize from Shinchosha Publishing in 1954. It was adapted to film on five separate occasions.
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