Silk (novel) explained

Silk
Title Orig:Seta
Translator:Guido Waldman
Author:Alessandro Baricco
Country:Italy
Language:Italian
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Rizzoli editore
Release Date:1996
English Release Date:October 1997
Media Type:Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages:100 pp (First edition, hardcover)
Isbn:88-17-66059-0
Oclc:34657857

Silk (Italian: '''Seta''') is a 1996 novel by the Italian writer Alessandro Baricco. It was translated into English in 1997 by Guido Waldman. A new English translation by Ann Goldstein was published in 2006.

Plot

The extraordinary novel tells the story of a French silkworm merchant-turned-smuggler named Hervé Joncour in 19th century France who travels to Japan for his town's supply of silkworms after a disease wipes out their African supply. His first trip to Japan takes place in the Bakumatsu period, when Japan was still largely closed to foreigners. During his stay in Japan, he becomes obsessed with the concubine of a local baron. His trade in Japan and his personal relationship with the concubine are both strained by the internal political turmoil and growing anti-Western sentiment in Japan that followed the arrival of Matthew C. Perry in Edo Bay.

Adaptations

Silk has been adapted for stage and film:

Editions

Silk (English edition) by Alessandro Baricco; translated by Guido Waldman.