
1. From Fisherman’s Daughter to Captive
In 1929, nine-year-old Chiyo Sakamoto is sold by her impoverished family in Yoroido, a coastal fishing village, to an okiya (geisha house) in Kyoto. Stripped of her sister and home, Chiyo endures the harsh world of Gion’s free maidservants and jealous senior geisha. A chance encounter with the mysterious “Chairman” sparks her determination to survive and thrive as a geisha.
2. Training, Rivalry & Transformation
Under the tutelage of the elegant Mameha, Chiyo adopts the geisha name “Sayuri”. She masters dance, music, and the art of conversation, dazzling patrons with her famed blue-gray eyes. Yet rival Hatsumomo schemes endlessly to ruin Sayuri’s reputation. Through perseverance and Mameha’s strategic mentorship, Sayuri secures record-breaking bids at her debut, pays off her debts, and cements her status among Kyoto’s elite entertainers.
3. War, Love & New Beginnings
As World War II forces Kyoto’s pleasure districts to close, Sayuri is sent north to avoid conscription. After the conflict, she returns to Gion and navigates personal heartbreak and long-held loyalties. Ultimately, she reunites with the Chairman—her lifelong patron and secret love—who reveals he always recognized her as the little girl from Yoroido. Sayuri retires in New York City, where she opens a tea house, preserving her memories and legacy far from Gion.
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ISBN: | |
Publisher: | Alfred A. Knopf |
Publication date: | 08/07/2025 |
Pages: | 448 |
Subject: | Fiction |
Arthur Golden is an American author best known for his internationally acclaimed novel Memoirs of a Geisha. Born in 1956 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Golden was raised in a family with strong literary and cultural roots—his grandfather was the co-founder of Time magazine. Golden studied Japanese art and history at Harvard University and later earned a Master’s degree in Japanese history from Columbia University. His deep academic background, including time spent living in Tokyo, profoundly influenced his literary voice and thematic choices. Golden’s breakthrough came with the publication of Memoirs of a Geisha in 1997. The novel, narrated in the first person, follows the life of a fictional geisha named Sayuri from her childhood in a poor fishing village to her rise as one of Kyoto’s most celebrated geisha before and after World War II. Golden’s ability to bring historical Japan to life with meticulous detail and emotional depth captivated readers worldwide. The novel was a critical and commercial success, translated into over 30 languages and adapted into a major motion picture in 2005. Despite controversies regarding the novel’s accuracy and Golden’s fictionalization of real geisha experiences, his work remains a significant contribution to cross-cultural literature. Golden has not published another novel since, but Memoirs of a Geisha continues to influence global perceptions of Japanese culture and storytelling.