Kawabata started to achieve recognition for a number of his short stories shortly after he graduated, receiving acclaim for "
The Dancing Girl of Izu" in 1926, a story about a melancholy student who, on a walking trip down
Izu Peninsula, meets a young dancer, and returns to Tokyo in much improved spirits. The work explores the dawning eroticism of young love but includes shades of melancholy and even bitterness, which offset what might have otherwise been an overly sweet story. Most of his subsequent works explored similar themes. In the 1920s, Kawabata was living in the plebeian district of
Asakusa, Tokyo. During this period, Kawabata experimented with different styles of writing. In
Asakusa kurenaidan (
The Scarlet Gang of Asakusa), serialized from 1929 to 1930, he explores the lives of the
demimonde and others on the fringe of society, in a style echoing that of late
Edo period literature. On the other hand, his is pure
stream-of-consciousness writing. He was even involved in writing the script for the experimental film
A Page of Madness. Kawabata met his wife Hideko (née Matsubayashi) in 1925, and they registered their marriage on 2 December 1931. In 1933, Kawabata protested publicly against the arrest, torture and death of the young leftist writer
Takiji Kobayashi in Tokyo by the
Tokkō special political police. Kawabata relocated from Asakusa to
Kamakura,
Kanagawa Prefecture, in 1934 and, although he initially enjoyed a very active social life among the many other writers and literary people residing in that city during the war years and immediately thereafter, in his later years he became very reclusive. One of his most famous novels was
Snow Country, started in 1934 and first published in installments from 1935 through 1937.
Snow Country is a stark tale of a love affair between a Tokyo dilettante and a provincial
geisha, which takes place in a remote hot-spring town somewhere in the mountainous regions of northern Japan. It established Kawabata as one of Japan's foremost authors and became an instant classic, described by
Edward G. Seidensticker as "perhaps Kawabata's masterpiece". After the end of World War II, Kawabata's success continued with novels such as
Thousand Cranes (a story of ill-fated love),
The Sound of the Mountain,
The House of the Sleeping Beauties,
Beauty and Sadness, and
The Old Capital.
Thousand Cranes (serialized 1949–1951) is centered on the
Japanese tea ceremony and hopeless love. The protagonist is attracted to the mistress of his dead father and, after her death, to her daughter, who flees from him. The tea ceremony provides a beautiful background for ugly human affairs, but Kawabata's intent is rather to explore feelings about death. The tea ceremony utensils are permanent and forever, whereas people are frail and fleeting. These themes of impossible love and impending death are again explored in
The Sound of the Mountain (serialized 1949–1954), set in Kawabata's adopted home of Kamakura. The protagonist, an aging man, has become disappointed with his children and no longer feels strong passion for his wife. He is strongly attracted to someone forbidden – his daughter-in-law – and his thoughts for her are interspersed with memories of another forbidden love, for his dead sister-in-law. The book that Kawabata himself considered his finest work,
The Master of Go (1951), contrasts sharply with his other works. It is a semi-fictional recounting of a major
Go match in 1938, on which he had actually reported for the
Mainichi newspaper chain. It was the last game of master
Shūsai's career and he lost to his younger challenger,
Minoru Kitani, only to die a little over a year later. Although the novel is moving on the surface as a retelling of a climactic struggle, some readers consider it a symbolic parallel to the defeat of Japan in World War II. Through many of Kawabata's works the sense of distance in his life is represented. He often gives the impression that his characters have built up a wall around them that moves them into isolation. In a 1934 published work Kawabata wrote: "I feel as though I have never held a woman's hand in a romantic sense [...] Am I a happy man deserving of pity?”. Indeed, this does not have to be taken literally, but it does show the type of emotional insecurity that Kawabata felt, especially experiencing two painful love affairs at a young age. Kawabata left many of his stories apparently unfinished, sometimes to the annoyance of readers and reviewers, but this goes hand to hand with his aesthetics of art for art's sake, leaving outside any sentimentalism, or morality, that an ending would give to any book. This was done intentionally, as Kawabata felt that vignettes of incidents along the way were far more important than conclusions. He equated his form of writing with the traditional poetry of Japan, the
haiku. In addition to fictional writing, Kawabata also worked as a reporter, most notably for the
Mainichi Shimbun. Although he refused to participate in the militaristic fervor that accompanied
World War II, he also demonstrated little interest in postwar political reforms. Along with the death of all his family members while he was young, Kawabata suggested that the war was one of the greatest influences on his work, stating he would be able to write only elegies in postwar Japan. Still, many commentators detect little thematic change between Kawabata's prewar and postwar writings. ==Awards==