
The story opens in a bustling provincial town where anticipation for a foreign professor’s arrival reaches every corner, from schoolchildren perched on bamboo poles to seasoned storytellers hawking exotic tales of America. As the daimyo obliges the university’s petition, a grand old manor is transformed—new carpets, heavy iron furniture, and a constant supply of “fire‑water” signal the impending cultural clash. Genji Negato, a young samurai fluent in English, oversees the frantic preparations, juggling the demands of his foreign guest with the uneasy pride of his fellow warriors.
Beneath the polished façade, the household’s servants whisper about the mysterious “white hand” that seems to reach into their lives, hinting at both curiosity and apprehension. Through vivid descriptions of the town’s rituals, the novel captures the tension between age‑old Japanese tradition and the alluring, unsettling influence of the West, setting the stage for a tale of humor, misunderstanding, and the fragile bridge between two worlds.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (169K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2020-11-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1875–1954
A pioneering North American novelist and screenwriter, she became famous for popular fiction published under the pen name Onoto Watanna. Her life moved from Montreal to New York, Alberta, and Hollywood, and her work is now read as an important part of early Asian North American literary history.
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