Skip to main content
Endo Shusaku Literary Museum
|

Endo Shusaku Literary Museum

museum

Endo Shusaku Literary Museum

遠藤周作文学館

4.3Est. 90Nagasaki, Kyushu
JTA Approved

Overview

Endo Shusaku (1923–1996) is sometimes referred to as “the Japanese Graham Greene,” as he wrote novels based around Catholic themes.

Endo Shusaku (1923-1996) set his most celebrated novel, Silence, in the Sotome region of Nagasaki, where Portuguese missionaries faced brutal persecution of their Japanese Christian converts in the 17th century. The book is a landmark of Japanese Catholic literature, and the museum opened here in 2000 partly because of Endo's widow and son, who supported placing it in the landscape he wrote about. The permanent collection includes a recreation of Endo's Tokyo study, photographs, and manuscripts. The building sits between the hills of Sotome and the Sumonada Sea, looking toward the Goto Islands, the same view Endo carried when he imagined this coastline as the setting for spiritual crisis.

Practical info

Japanese name
遠藤周作文学館
Nearest station
Nagasaki Station (30 min bus)
Payment
Cards accepted
Reservations
Advance tickets available online and at convenience stores. Walk-in usually fine on weekdays. Check hours before visiting.

Accessibility

Wheelchair entranceWheelchair parkingWheelchair restroom
Loading details...

Want to visit Endo Shusaku Literary Museum?

Build a trip to Nagasaki