Andrew Taylor

Light and dark | 1 August 2019

In a surreal story originally written for Japanese Playboy, Mishima’s hero solves cases involving poisoned carrots, secret ciphers and a female vampire

issue 03 August 2019

Few biographies are quite as impressive as Yukio Mishima’s. One of Japan’s most famous authors, he wrote 80 plays and 25 novels, starred in movies, directed theatre and produced his own film. He was nominated three times for the Nobel Prize in Literature. He founded a right-wing militia to defend the emperor from Marxists and, in 1970, committed ritual suicide, aged 45, after the failure of his coup to overturn the constitution.

Life for Sale is one of his lesser-known achievements. Though it’s littered with corpses, it seems almost humdrum when compared with its creator’s CV. Originally written for Japanese Playboy and published in 1968, this is, I think, the first time it has appeared in English.

Hanio is young, solvent and single. He’s also tired of life and tries to kill himself. When this ambition is thwarted, he decides it might be simpler to let someone else do the job for him.

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