Wonderful Fool
by Shusaku Endo
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Gaston Bonaparte, a young Frenchman, visits Tokyo to stay with his pen-pal Takamori. His appearance is a bitter disappointment to his new friends and his behavior causes them acute embarrassment. He is a trusting person with a simple love for others, and he continues to trust even after they have demonstrated deceit and betrayal. He spends his time not sightseeing but making friends with street children, stray dogs, prostitutes, and gangsters. This novel charts his misadventures with sharp show more irony, satire, and objectivity. show lessTags
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Set in 1950s Tokyo, an unexpected letter arrives for Takamori - a slightly feckless young man, living with his smug career-driven sister. His French penpal from years ago s coming to stay.
When he arrives, Gaston is an apparently goofy, childlike individual, with a tendency to take up with stray dogs and social undesirables, much to the sister's scorn. Uninterested in the sights, he gravitates to people, and soon finds himself caught up in a murderous plot.
The theme is not crime, though, but love, redemption and forgiveness. The reader soon realises that Gaston is a Christ figure, here to suffer, mourn and rge those around him to a better life.
There are some really well-written moments: the last chapter was perfect, as was the trip to show more the dog pound. I lost ifocus somewhat in the lead up to the final scene, as gangster Endo drags Gaston along to a desperate battle...
Not up to quality of Endo's better-known 'Silence' but interesting. show less
When he arrives, Gaston is an apparently goofy, childlike individual, with a tendency to take up with stray dogs and social undesirables, much to the sister's scorn. Uninterested in the sights, he gravitates to people, and soon finds himself caught up in a murderous plot.
The theme is not crime, though, but love, redemption and forgiveness. The reader soon realises that Gaston is a Christ figure, here to suffer, mourn and rge those around him to a better life.
There are some really well-written moments: the last chapter was perfect, as was the trip to show more the dog pound. I lost ifocus somewhat in the lead up to the final scene, as gangster Endo drags Gaston along to a desperate battle...
Not up to quality of Endo's better-known 'Silence' but interesting. show less
In this book, Gaston Bonaparte, ironically a descendant of Napoleon, arrives in Tokyo as the guest of a typically middle-class, materialistic Japanese family. Gas, however, is irresistibly drawn to victims, to the downtrodden in Japanese society and he nourishes them with compassion.
Shusaku Endo - Der wunderbare Träumer
Die hintergruendige Geschichte eines wundervollen Narren und seltsamen Traeumers, der dem Leben der Menschen, die ihm begegnen, eine ueberraschende Wendung gibt.
Gaston Bonaparte, ein Brieffreund aus der Jugend, wird mit Spannung vom Geschwisterpaar Takamori und Tomoe erwartet Doch wie enttaeuscht sind sie, bei der Ankunft einen unbeholfenen Riesen vorzufinden, der in seiner Kindlichkeit fuer alle Tolpatschigkeit zu haben ist. Erst nach und nach werden sie im Kontakt mit ihm seine Grosszuegigkeit und sein kindliches Herz schaetzen lernen, mit denen er den Menschen und auch Tieren begegnet und letztlich sogar einen Moerder beruehrt.
Gaston ist jener Mensch, der – wie eine japanische Person im show more Gegensatz den Mangel in der japanischen Gesellschaft darstellt – den anderen Vertrauen schenkt und das Gute in ihm annimmt. Er ist eine fast schon kindliche, unschuldige Gestalt, in der Folge eines Dostojevkischen « Idioten » oder des «Gentlemans aus dem Sueden » eines Walker Percy. Diese Form der Unschuld, ja der Heiligkeit, mag teils Widerspruch und Spott hervorrufen, doch sie gibt uns zu denken.
Endō Shūsaku , * 27. März 1923 in Sugamo/Tōkyō; † 29. September 1996 war japanischer Schriftsteller. Seine Werke sind stark von seinem christlichen Glauben geprägt, zu dem er im Alter von 12 Jahren übertrat. show less
Die hintergruendige Geschichte eines wundervollen Narren und seltsamen Traeumers, der dem Leben der Menschen, die ihm begegnen, eine ueberraschende Wendung gibt.
Gaston Bonaparte, ein Brieffreund aus der Jugend, wird mit Spannung vom Geschwisterpaar Takamori und Tomoe erwartet Doch wie enttaeuscht sind sie, bei der Ankunft einen unbeholfenen Riesen vorzufinden, der in seiner Kindlichkeit fuer alle Tolpatschigkeit zu haben ist. Erst nach und nach werden sie im Kontakt mit ihm seine Grosszuegigkeit und sein kindliches Herz schaetzen lernen, mit denen er den Menschen und auch Tieren begegnet und letztlich sogar einen Moerder beruehrt.
Gaston ist jener Mensch, der – wie eine japanische Person im show more Gegensatz den Mangel in der japanischen Gesellschaft darstellt – den anderen Vertrauen schenkt und das Gute in ihm annimmt. Er ist eine fast schon kindliche, unschuldige Gestalt, in der Folge eines Dostojevkischen « Idioten » oder des «Gentlemans aus dem Sueden » eines Walker Percy. Diese Form der Unschuld, ja der Heiligkeit, mag teils Widerspruch und Spott hervorrufen, doch sie gibt uns zu denken.
Endō Shūsaku , * 27. März 1923 in Sugamo/Tōkyō; † 29. September 1996 war japanischer Schriftsteller. Seine Werke sind stark von seinem christlichen Glauben geprägt, zu dem er im Alter von 12 Jahren übertrat. show less
May 3, 2008German
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164+ Works 9,043 Members
Shusaku Endo was born in Tokyo in 1923 and, with his family, converted to Catholicism while he was still a child. Much of his writing centers on the conflict this conversion engendered as he struggled to develop faith in a deity foreign to Japanese culture. His writings also reflect on his experiences during World War II during the bombings and show more the subsequent shortage of basic human necessities for the Japanese people. He explores the suffering endured and the inevitable shock wave upon human relationships and the human psyche. Endo graduated from Keio University and then journeyed to France after the war to continue his studies, but was forced to return to Japan because of illness. After a period of convalescence Endo decided on a writing career, publishing his first novel, Shiroihito, in 1955. His novel The Samurai, published in the United States in 1996, is considered one of his finest works. His novel Silence, was made into a major motion picture and premiered in November 2016. Endo's reputation is due in part to his exploration of moral dilemma as it relates to divergent cultures. Endo has won many literary awards. In 1982 he was elected to the Japan Arts Academy. Shusaku Endo died in 1996. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Wonderful Fool
- Original title
- Obakasan
- Original publication date
- 1959 (original Japanese) (original Japanese); 1974 (English: Mathy) (English: Mathy)
- People/Characters
- Gaston Bonaparte; Takamori Higaki; Tomoe Higaki; Endo
- Important places
- Tokyo, Japan
- First words
- It was a Sunday morning in late March.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)One day he'll come lumbering down again from that far-off azure country to take upon his back once more the sorrow of people like these.
- Blurbers
- Greene, Graham; O,Brien, Geoffrey; Howe, Irving; Perrin, Noel; Dillard, Annie; Cooke, Judy
- Original language
- Japanese
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
- DDC/MDS
- 895.6 — Literature & rhetoric Asian Literature Literatures of East and Southeast Asia Japanese
- LCC
- PL849 .N4 .O213 — Language and Literature Languages and literatures of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania Languages of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania Japanese language and literature Japanese literature Individual authors and works
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 208
- Popularity
- 156,624
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.52)
- Languages
- 8 — Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Japanese, Russian, Swedish
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 14
- ASINs
- 6



























































