Books

Exploring Kyoto: On Foot in the Ancient Capital

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This revised and updated edition of the Japan travel classic and cultural guide gets you wandering from downtown quarters to remote mountaintop temples and features expanded information on new museums and gardens now open year-round for viewing.

Judith Clancy’s expert research weaves a rich narrative of Kyoto’s history, local lore, and artistic and religious background to guide you through your journey.

Includes:

  • 31 explorations including 5 mountain routes, 17 World Heritage Sites, Arashiyama, Kiyomizu-dera, Philosopher’s Walk, the city’s 6 Zen temple complexes, and much more
  • Detailed maps tracing each route
  • Over 30 descriptive photos
  • Tips on etiquette and behavior
  • A full index to all sites and attractions

 

Books

Good Night Papa

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“Taxi driving had taught him a lot about human nature. Take the middle-aged businessman, for instance; in the company of a woman he would tell Papa to “keep the change.” Alone, he would demand a receipt. If Papa liked his passenger he might venture a conversation. But he rarely did. His passion was driving. Driving and Elvis.”

Good Night Papa: Short Stories from Japan and Elsewhere is fifteen tales for the time-poor, set in Japan, Spain, China, Fiji, Mexico, Indonesia, Costa Rica and Australia. Triumphing over adversity is a central theme: a fugitive disguised as a pilgrim discovers his fate rests in the hands of a novice Buddhist monk in Japan (The Pilgrim); a recovering alcoholic mail pilot crashes his plane in the Australian desert with a bottle of gin on board (The Finke River Mail); a snobbish widow must ask the help of local cannery workers to carry a grand piano uphill to her home in Fiji (Baby Grand).

 

Books

Lotusland

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Limited time only — Save 40% by buying a signed book directly from the author with this link:




Synopsis: Nathan Monroe is a 28-year-old American living in Saigon who falls in love with a poor but talented Vietnamese painter. When he fails to protect their love from her desperate chase for a better life in America, his safety net appears in the form of Anthony, an old domineering friend in Hanoi who hires Nathan at his real estate firm. Only much later does Nathan discover that Anthony has intended all along for him to take over his job and family so that he, too, can escape and start his life over in America.

Excerpt from Chapter One

Nathan tossed and turned on the hard lower bunk of his sleeper-class room. He peered at his cell phone; it would take 30 more hours to reach Hanoi. He was struck by how things were always a long wait for him. Nothing was simple, and whatever seemed certain had a way of being turned on its head without warning.

The sound of the train was low and whooshing, like the winds of a relentless rainstorm. Whenever the train pulled into a station the lull of stillness became just as loud, howling inside him, heightening his restlessness.

Lying there, discomposed by his companions’ snores, a premonition of endless night took hold of him. Unable to stand it, he left the room.

In the passageway a young man sat on a stool with his face buried in a copy of the Army Newspaper. There was nowhere else to sit, though Nathan did see, at the end of the last train car he was in, that the door was open and led to a small platform.

He stepped outside and sat down. The night was cool and full of starlight. With his legs dangling over the edge he watched a mosaic of moonlit fields emerge from a tangle of trees now receding on both sides of the track.

Nathan turned around at the sound of someone approaching the platform door. He was surprised to find a young woman with a train-issued blanket draped over her head. It was an odd way to wander through a train, and coming outside alone and as late as this piqued his interest. As she stood in the doorway considering the small space that Nathan occupied, or whatever was on her mind, he gestured for her to sit with him.

She tugged the blanket from her head and, when she slipped into a shaft of moonlight, her hair appeared as pink as a rose.

Her age was hard to guess, though she was young, between 20 and 25. The more he looked at her hair the more its shape came to resemble that of a rosebud: it enfolded her face so that the ends nearly met beneath her chin.

She wore loose-fitting pajamas and tatami sandals. She asked him for the time — Trời ơi, mệt quá . . . Bây giờ là mấy giờ rồi? Her pronunciation—z’s in place of y’s and r’s; ch’s in place of tr’s — was lilting and feminine, yet distinctly northern. There was something almost startling about the Vietnamese she automatically used, and it pleased him that she would.

He pulled out his cell phone and saw it was just after two. Hai giờ rồi.

Hai giờ hả?

The northern accent was easier for him because it distinguished more between sounds. Yet there was something cold and hard about the northern way of speaking, a wintry almost martial quality. But maybe it was only Hanoi’s chill weather and thick cloud cover that bled the color from the streets, buildings, even the clothing of the people, and made him feel this. For there was something warm and inviting about this pink-haired young woman….

 

Books

Deep Kyoto: Walks

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Note: This book is available for free on Kindle Unlimited

Praise for Deep Kyoto: Walks

…..“the size and layout of Kyoto make it perfect for walking and exploring. And, as Taylor mentions in the introduction, life is often lived outdoors in Asia, so there is much to take in while out exploring in the city. There are useful endnotes throughout to explain specific aspects of Japanese culture or history with Web links to places mentioned, as well as 12 maps with links to Google Maps. This incidental information about Japanese history, culture and society is invaluable in itself. For both visitors and those who live in Japan and have the opportunity for repeat visits, “Deep Kyoto Walks” provides inspiration and a variety of courses for exploration deep in the heart of Kyoto.” Review by Patrick McCoy in The Japan Times.

Book Description:

Deep Kyoto: Walks is an anthology of 18 meditative strolls in Japan’s ancient cultural capital. Independently produced by 16 writers who have made their home in Kyoto, this book is both a tribute to life in the city of “Purple Hills and Crystal Streams”, and a testament to the art of contemplative city walking. In a series of rambles that express each writer’s intimate relationship with the city, they take you not only to the most famous shrines and temples, but also to those backstreets of memory where personal history and the greater story of the city intersect. Join Pico Iyer, Judith Clancy, Chris Rowthorn, John Dougill, Robert Yellin, John Ashburne and more as they explore markets and mountains, bars and gardens, palaces and pagodas and show us Kyoto afresh through the eyes of those who call it “home”.

Included are:
18 walks
16 photographic illustrations
A specially commissioned woodblock print by Richard Steiner
12 detailed maps
Links to all locations on Google Maps
Cover Art by internationally acclaimed artist Sarah Brayer