In 1953, Enchi's novel was received favorably by critics. Her novel is a violent, harrowing tale of family misfortune and physical and emotional deprivation, based partly on wartime personal experiences, and in 1954 won the Women's Literature Prize. Enchi's next novel was also highly praised: won the
Noma Literary Prize. The novel is set in the
Meiji period and analyzes the plight of women who have no alternative but to accept the role assigned to them in the patriarchal social order. The protagonist is the wife of a government official, who is humiliated when her husband not only takes
concubines, but has them live under the same roof as both maids and as secondary wives. From the 1950s and 1960s, Enchi became quite successful, and wrote numerous novels and short stories exploring female
psychology and
sexuality. In
Masks (
Onna men, 1958), her protagonist is based on Lady Rokujō from
The Tale of Genji, depicted as a shamanistic character. After losing her son in a climbing accident on
Mount Fuji, she manipulates her widowed daughter-in-law to have a son by any means to replace the one she lost. One of the quotes from the book says, "A woman's love is quick to turn into a passion for revenge--an obsession that becomes an endless river of blood, flowing on from generation to generation". The theme of shamanism and spiritual possession appears repeatedly in Enchi's works in the 1960s. Enchi contrasted the traditions of female subjugation in
Buddhism with the role of the female shaman in the indigenous Japanese
Shinto religion, and used this as a means to depict the female shaman as a vehicle for either retribution against men, or empowerment for women. In
A Tale of False Fortunes (
Nama miko monogatari, 1965, also translated as
A Tale of False Oracles, literal translation "The Tale of An Enchantress"), a retelling of the
Eiga Monogatari (
A Tale of Flowering Fortunes), she sets the story in the
Heian period, with the protagonist as Empress Teishi (historical figure
Fujiwara no Teishi, also known as Sadako), a consort of
Emperor Ichijo. The novel won the 1966 Women's Literature Prize. Alongside
The Waiting Years and
Masks,
A Tale of False Fortunes is considered to be her third work to be directly influenced by
The Tale of Genji. Three of her stories were selected for the
Tanizaki Prize in 1969:
Shu wo ubau mono (朱を奪うもの),
Kizu aru tsubasa (傷ある翼) and
Niji to shura (虹と修羅). Another theme in Enchi's writing is eroticism in aging women, which she saw as a biological inequality between men and women. In
Saimu (lit. "Coloured Mist", 1976), an aging woman becomes obsessed with a fantasy in which she can revitalize herself through sexual liaisons with young men. Enchi's works combined elements of
realism and erotic
fantasy, a style that was new at the time. ==Later life and death==