64 pages • 2 hours read
Gail TsukiyamaA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Summary
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
Autumn: September 15, 1937-Autumn: September 29, 1937
Autumn: October 5, 1937-Autumn: October 29, 1937
Autumn: October 30, 1937-Autumn: November 30, 1937
Autumn: December 1, 1937-Winter: December 7, 1937
Winter: December 21, 1937-Winter: February 4, 1938
Winter: February 5, 1938- Winter: March 14, 1938
Spring: March 28, 1938-Spring: May 30, 1938
Summer: June 6, 1938-Summer: July 5, 1938
Summer: July 9, 1938-Summer: August 16, 1938
Summer: August 17, 1938-Autumn: September 23, 1938
Autumn: September 28, 1938-Autumn: October 19
Autumn: October 20, 1938-Autumn: October 26, 1938
Autumn: October 27, 1938-Autumn: October 29, 1938
Character Analysis
Themes
Symbols & Motifs
Important Quotes
Essay Topics
Tools
In The Samurai’s Garden, Tsukiyama, a 21st-century woman, writes in first person as a man. Considering the cultural setting of the novel (1930s Japan during the Second Sino-Japanese War), why might she have chosen this narrator?
Stephen’s book is his storytelling method. Why does Tsukiyama choose this means of expression for her narrator (vs. simply having him “speak” his thoughts, his feelings, and the novel’s events)? Please consider Stephen’s personality, the journal style’s effect on the reader, and the importance of the act of creation as put forth in the novel.
Flowers are a central symbol in The Samurai’s Garden. Please choose three instances of flowers as symbol from the novel and explain how they help us to understand Stephen’s journey.
Many readers reading this novel for the first time believe, when Stephen meets Keiko, that it will become a love story. Why does Tsukiyama first set up, then flout this expectation? What kind of story does it seem is more important to the author to explore, and why?
Matsu is the “samurai” in The Samurai’s Garden. Please do some research into the Japanese tradition of the samurai and find parallels in the novel’s exploration of Matsu as a character. How is Matsu a “samurai”? Why does it matter, considering one or more of the novel’s themes?
This novel is structured by seasons, from Autumn to Autumn during Stephen’s stay in Tarumi. Breaking Stephen’s stay into these seasons (Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer, Autumn), how do you see the events of each season reflecting that season as archetype (e.g., Winter as death)?
The novel’s suicides of the past – Tomoko’s successful and Sachi’s attempted – are never far from Matsu’s, Sachi’s, and Kenzo’s minds. When Kenzo hangs himself in the present, what is his reason? Is he sending a message? Extinguishing shame with honor? Getting revenge? All, some, or none of the above? Please use Kenzo’s own words and the words of others about him to support your answer.
To what degree do Stephen’s nationality, his economic status, and his Westernization affect his ability to understand traditional Japanese Tarumi and assimilate with its villagers? What about Stephen is particularly “Chinese”? What about him is “Western”? What about him is more universal? Please use examples from the novel.
Why does Tsukiyama choose Matsu’s garden as the subject of Stephen’s painting (as opposed to, for example, Sachi, Tama shrine, Keiko, the beach, or any other subject)? How do the garden and Stephen’s re-creation of it reflect Stephen’s trajectory in the novel? Please use excerpts during which Stephen paints or discusses painting, along with descriptions of the garden, as support.