Author Guide · 2026-05-01 · Reading time ~ 7 min
Yoshiki Hayama — One Writer, Seven Voices
Seven short pieces by Yoshiki Hayama, often boxed as a 'proletarian writer.' Read together they show seven distinct voices: fable, satire, ghost-tinged stalking story, naturalistic tragedy, letter-frame, fishing essay.
Pagera Editorial
Yoshiki Hayama (1894-1945) usually gets a one-line summary as a proletarian writer. The seven pieces now on Pagera in Korean show how partial that label is.
Two starting points
"The Letter in the Cement Barrel" (1926)
The canonical Japanese proletarian short story. A cement-factory worker on break finds a small box inside a cement barrel. Inside is a note from a country girl whose fiancé was sucked into the crusher and became cement. Anger and grief run together, neither breaks free.
"The Charm of Shinano Mountain Trout"
The same writer, in a relaxed fishing essay. Worker-narrator outwitting trout in Nagano. The same writer wrote both — that contrast is the point.