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CATALOG*Poetry
Momotaro and the Island of Ogres
Retold, with a postscript by Stephanie Wada

One of Japan’s best-loved children’s stories brought to life by the extraordinary imagery of an early-nineteenth-century handscroll.

The amazing adventures of Momotaro, a boy found inside a peach and raised by an elderly couple, is one of Japan’s most popular folktales. An exquisite handscroll painted by Kano Naganobu (1775–1828), in the Spencer Collection of The New York Public Library, contains one of the finest illustrated versions of the tale known today. The illustrations are reproduced in their entirety as the story follows Momotaro’s journey to the terrifying Island of Ogres where, with the aid of some animal friends, he lays siege to the demons’ ill-gotten treasures. One of the first Japanese folktales to have been translated into English, Momotaro is a delightful and lively voyage of the imagination that can be enjoyed by young and old alike.

A lengthy postscript to the tale looks at the tradition of illustrated folk stories in Japan, with examples of Momotaro pictures and related imagery in various forms of art, including painting and woodblock printing. The career of the artist, Kano Naganobu, and the artistic climate in which he worked are also reviewed.

Stephanie Wada is Associate Curator at the Mary and Jackson Burke Foundation, one of the most extensive private collections of Japanese art outside of Japan. She has taught courses in Asian art at Temple University, Parsons School of Design, Columbia University, and the City College of New York. She lives in New York City.

12 X 8 1/2 in., 64 pages, 40 pages of color illustrations
ISBN 08-8076-1552-8
Price $21.95

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Momotaro
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