Geisha, A Life By Mineko Iwasaki, with Rande Brown
Geishas are not hookers. I’d say they are more akin to models, but that is also unfair. Models are known almost exclusively for their looks. Geisha train extensively in the traditional Japanese arts, such as tea ceremony, dancing, and music, and are expected to entertain flawlessly in addition to creating a pleasant visual environment. In her autobiography, Geisha, A Life , Mineko Iwasaki, with assistance from Rande Brown , presents a wonderful peak into her cloistered life as a star of Kyoto. The majority of Mineko’s youth was spent in an okiya, a geisha boarding house of sorts, run by an almighty proprietress known as the okasan. Fledgling geisha live in these establishments during their intensive, guildlike instruction period which runs seven days a week. These ladies debut as a maiko, or apprentice geisha, around the age of fifteen and serve in this capacity for approximately five years. Afterward, as a full-fledged geisha, the women are expected to have established their own ...