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Recommended Reading: 600 Classics Reviewed

Spring Snow

by Yukio Mishima

1969

Novel

Historical

An eighteen-year-old school boy's obsessional love for a girl betrothed to the Imperial Prince puts both of them in conflict with family and society. A rich prose picture of the changing mores of 20th century Japan frames the tragic story of star-crossed lovers.

In 1912 Kiyoaki Matsugae, the handsome only son of an old and very wealthy samurai family, is one of the most privileged young men in Tokyo society. Sensitive and prone to melancholy, however, he feels alienated from his family, insecure, and unmotivated. Although powerfully drawn to Satoko, a twenty-year-old girl with whom he was reared, he is too fearful to declare his love.

Tradition demands that Satoko's family find her a husband. Because the love between her and Kiyoaki remains unacknowledged, she must commit herself to marriage to the Emperor's son. Kiyoaki, finding his courage or perhaps stimulated by the rivalry, confesses his desire, and he and Satoko become lovers. As the intricate political and social machinery of the betrothal proceeds inexorably, their secret affair intensifies. When Satoko becomes pregnant, the lovers find themselves in a trap from which they cannot escape. Both are doomed.

In their culture, their romance is at once social anathema and political treachery. The novel dramatizes the clash between private and public lives and the collision of past and present, as Japan emerges from its long isolation. On another level, we see that the individual is captive to his own emotions and imprisoned by the social structure in which he lives. The young lovers, in the spring of their lives and the bloom of their love, cannot escape the snow-cold reality of their world.

Mishima embodies this bleak, existential drama in a vibrant poetic style, lavish with word paintings of the workings of nature, body, and mind. An entire panorama of personalities and social classes serves as backdrop to the love story and offers us a fascinating glimpse of another time, another culture.

Citation Types

Type
Format
MLA 9th
Mishima, Yukio. "Spring Snow." Recommended Reading: 600 Classics Reviewed, edited by Editors of Salem Press, Salem Press, 2015. Salem Online, online.salempress.com/articleDetails.do?articleName=6CR_0520.
APA 7th
Mishima, Y. (2015). Spring Snow. In E. Salem Press (Ed.), Recommended Reading: 600 Classics Reviewed. Salem Press. online.salempress.com.
CMOS 17th
Mishima, Yukio. "Spring Snow." Edited by Editors of Salem Press. Recommended Reading: 600 Classics Reviewed. Hackensack: Salem Press, 2015. Accessed September 15, 2025. online.salempress.com.