It is that so-called “insignificant encounter” that Murakami focuses on to develop beautiful short stories.
Category: Blog
Review—The Gion Festival: Exploring its Mysteries
Review by Cody Poulton It’s a bitter irony that a festival that is nearly as old as Kyoto, dedicated to ridding the city of pestilence in the hot and sticky month of July, was cancelled by the world-wide coronavirus pandemic last year. 2021 bodes no better: the great processions of splendid floats through the city, More…
Excerpt—Tokyo Stranger (from When a Stranger Comes to Town)
Mystery Writers of America’s story collection When a Stranger Comes to Town, edited by Michael Koryta was just released (April 21, 2021)! Thanks to Hanover Square Press and Tina deBellegarde for giving BOA permission to run the following story from the anthology. It’s been said that all great literature boils down to one of two More…
Review—Multispecies Cities: Solarpunk Urban Futures (Speculative Fiction)
Review by Leanne Ogasawara Set primarily in the Asia-Pacific, the twenty-four stories of this new collection of climate fiction seek to imagine what cities might look like in a future of multi-species co-existence and green justice. Firmly planted in the new genre of solarpunk, the stories are filled with a polyphony of voices—some non-human and More…
Review—Lonely Planet Best Day Hikes Japan
Review by Wes Lang My time in Japan coincides directly with the history of Lonely Planet’s Hiking in Japan guidebook. I arrived on these shores in March of 2001, just one month after the release of the first edition of the guide. I soon picked up a copy of the teal and black cover and More…
Review—Earthlings: A Novel
Grove Press (October 8, 2020) Review by Tina deBellegarde Earthlings by Sayaka Murata (transl. Ginny Tapley Takemori) is a unique literary experience, one that is impossible to pigeonhole into any specific genre. It opens as a coming-of-age story, evolves into psychological suspense, and settles into dark fantasy and horror. As she did in Convenience Store More…
Review—Klara and the Sun, by Kazuo Ishiguro
A Tale of Two Ishiguros Review by Cody Poulton Once upon a time there were two men who shared the same surname and an interest in robots. One of them, Kazuo, left Japan and became a little Englishman, but he always felt like an outsider, which is a good thing for a writer, which is More…
Review—Tokyo Junkie: 60 Years of Bright Lights and Back Alleys…and Baseball
Review by Mark Schumacher Since the 1977 release of his first book The Chrysanthemum and the Bat, author Robert Whiting has remained the “go to” guy for entertaining and educating and enlightening books about Japan. His many English books and articles, once translated into Japanese, have hit the bestseller lists in Japan. Whiting resonates on More…
Excerpt—Cherry Blossom poems from “Well-Versed: Exploring Modern Japanese Haiku”
With the cherry blossoms in mankai (full bloom) now in Japan, we take some time to contemplate their beauty through poetry. The following are two excerpts from the just released Well-Versed: Exploring Modern Japanese Haiku (Japan Library/JPIC March 23, 2021) with commentary by Japanese haiku poet and critic Osawa Minoru (translated by Janine Beichman). The More…
First Book—Jon Tanimura & The World-Traveling Udon Maker
“First Book” is a new column where we ask first-time authors what inspired them to write their debut book/novel/translation. Books on Asia: What’s your book’s “elevator pitch?” Jon Tanimura: It’s an autobiography of a Japanese man who cooked Japanese Udon noodles for 5,000 people in 24 countries while traveling around the world as a nomad More…