The Otori
It's over ten years since the publication of the first book Across the Nightingale Floor (2002). Since then the Tales of the Otori have been world wide best sellers appealing to millions of readers in over 36 countries.
The heron is one of the key symbols in Tales of the Otori. It is the crest of the Otori clan and is used many times in comparisons with Lord Shigeru. He describes himself as having the patience of the heron (ATNF Chapter 3) and Takeo sees him as the heron that swooped into the village of Mino and caught him up.
Herons are beautiful, elegant birds that are often portrayed in Japanese art. In poetry they are often associated with the cold of winter. They stand motionless for a long time or stalk slowly through the water before catching their prey. When they take flight they utter a cry that is haunting and evocative. This is one of the last sounds heard at the end of Brilliance of the Moon, as the snow begins to fall.
Inuomono the dog chasing game (from Japan A History in Art by Bradley Smith)
A cat demon (from http://www.cat-city.com/museum/ukiyoe/meisho02.html)
I’ve written five books in the Tales of the Otori series. It started as a trilogy (Across the Nightingale Floor, Grass for his Pillow and Brilliance of the Moon) but I realised I had more to say about the characters and have written one book (Heaven’s Net is Wide) that ends where Across the Nightingale Floor begins...
A land of incomparable beauty torn by civil war An ancient tradition undermined by spies and assassins A society of rigid castes and codes subverted by love Takeo is raised among the Hidden, whose beliefs forbid them to kill. When his family fall victim to religious persecution at the hands of Lord Iida of the Dairyo clan, he is rescued and adopted by the warrior, Shigeru, of the Otori clan...
A beautiful, haunting evocation of a time and place just beyond the reach of an outside world, the third instalment of the Tales of the Otori transports us once again to a medieval Japan of Hearn s imagination, a land of formal ritual and codes, harsh beauty and deceptive appearance...