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The Traitor

A Novel

Kōbō Abe author Mark Gibeau translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Columbia University Press

Publishing:10th Mar '26

£20.00

This title is due to be published on 10th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Traitor cover

In postwar Japan, a writer meets a small-town innkeeper who is obsessed with a tale from the nineteenth century. He relates the saga of Enomoto Takeaki, an admiral in the final years of the Tokugawa shogunate who regained authority under the Meiji government. A former member of imperial Japan’s military police, the innkeeper dwells on the question of loyalty even as he struggles with his responsibility for the arrest and murder of his brother-in-law during the war. Later, he sends the writer a mysterious manuscript purporting to be the account of a peddler turned samurai whom Enomoto betrayed.

Part historical fiction, part detective story, The Traitor is a remarkable novel about navigating changing political landscapes by one of the most significant modern Japanese writers. In his only historical novel, Abe Kōbō turns to a pivotal moment in Japan’s past to explore profound questions about the nature of loyalty and the choices that people must make when they encounter forces beyond their control or understanding. Published in 1964, when a new generation had begun asking their parents about the war, Abe’s tale of betrayal sparked controversy across the political spectrum. The great writer’s most important previously untranslated novel, The Traitor displays Abe’s literary mastery from a new angle.

Abe Kōbō's novels were prescient ... and they still are. What could be more timely for us than this prescient historical novel in a masterful translation! -- Roger Pulvers, author of My Japan: A Cultural Memoir
In this beautifully rendered translation, Mark Gibeau brings us for the first time an important work of historical fiction by one of Japan’s leading postwar writers. This gripping novel provides a fascinating double perspective on both the chaotic pre-Meiji world that gave birth to modern Japan and the equally pivotal historical moment of mid-twentieth-century Japan when it was written. -- Meredith McKinney, translator of Natsume Sōseki’s Kokoro

ISBN: 9780231212953

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

384 pages