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Carolyn
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Dec 20, 2024 03:46PM

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I thought Maboroshi no Hikari was a fantastically good film.

I forgot about this conversation and nominated trinity x3... I am still up for a buddy read and, esp, a discussion on either of her short story collections. I can also back off of trinityx3 since I am going to read it anyway... Is there a preferred Izumi Suzuki book? I want to do a deep read this time.

I just started the anthology A Late Chrysanthemum. I surely gave read Shiga Haoya before but fortunately my poor memory makes the reading seem new.

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I have finished the two Jan group reads and a number of manga & lns so now:
The Elephant Vanishes is my current audiobook
I Want to Eat Your Pancreas by Yoru Sumino is my current light novel and I think I am a fan now of their works.
Suzume 1 is my current manga. I am a big fan of Makoto Shinkai’s works in any media.
I am working on our NF group read Confessions of a Yakuza: A Life in Japan's Underworld but have not made much progress due to reading rabbit holes.
As other NF is the 2024 edition of Lonely Planet Japan which is for planning a trip to northern Honshu.
I am timing out for a next j-lit fiction novel to read a Han Kang, Korean author, novel.


Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Unfortunately, it wasn't what I was looking for. Almost all of the book is biographies of Americans who spent some time in Japan, even about the decades of their lives before they were interested in Japan. Very few of the people described here are Japanese. Moreover, the people described are mostly the sorts of the people I wouldn't want to know personally: the idle rich, the exoticizers, the shallow fad-followers.
I was hoping to see Meiji Japan through their eyes, but there weren't enough quotes from their writings (or even lists of their writings) to be able to see Japan as they saw it. The only book I was able to add to my to-read list was Japanese Houses .

I've not seen a copy or ever read a review of the second book in the trilogy, Sorekara / And Then: Natsume Soseki's Novel Sorekara (UNESCO Collection of Representative Works. Japanese Series.). Since I'd have to purchase it, if anyone is a big fan of it, let me know.


I agree with you on Sanshiro. I read it as a glimpse into the past, which is clearly not why it was written.
I recently tried and gave up on "And Then". I don't even recall what it was about.

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

A 30 year old woman sees a 12 year old girl playing soccer alone in the park after dark, and goes to warn her. It turns out the kid is a boy. She starts teaching him, because he's not very good and she played through college. They start to get together for other things. It's not at all sexual. Yet she knows it's wrong, because she's doing it behind his parents' back. What parent wouldn't be worried?
I'm glad the author didn't go for the low-hanging fruit of a broken home. The boy's father is a widower and has to work long hours, but genuinely cares for his two sons. It makes the sense of foreboding even worse, just waiting for him to justifiably explode at this interfering woman.


It's the true story of Japanese soldiers stranded on a South Seas island at the end of the war. How closely will it parallel Lord of the Flies? Only reading it will tell.
(ILL was a near year's resolution of sorts, which I started in December. One book at a time, I want to borrow and read the books I can't otherwise find or afford to buy.)

I have to admit to liking these stories better than the ones in The Name of the Flower. These deal mostly with realistic difficulties women face in family and relationships.
The one story in this volume not centered on a woman is about a man who is uncomfortable around his newly found half-brother.

It's an exceedingly detailed novel whose sheer detail bored me. Some may find comparisons of timetables to be clever sleuthing. I wish it had been de-emphasized.
I also found the investigation implausible. A detective is allowed more than six months to investigate the alibi of a suspect who they really have no cause to suspect and spend that kind of manpower on. Despite him being correct and tearing the alibi apart at the end.
I suspect there's a market for books like this. But I'm not really part of that demographic.

It's a slice of life about the hostess club scene in Shinjuku in the early 70s. One could label it either linked short stories or an episodic novel. Some parts are upbeat, some tragic. I'm liking it quite a bit, though I have to admit that the fantasy element in the first story wasn't particularly welcome or necessary (it was like the gotcha at the end of an old Twilight Zone episode). There is a central character to the novel, for those who insist on such things, but he doesn't appear in every chapter.
If this sounds interesting, buy it soon. I hear the publisher is on its last legs.

It was published in 1952, I expect after the end of the occupation. The author expresses more anti-war and losing-the-war sentiments than would have been possible while the war was going on (which likely would appeal more to his post-war readership), but it is not completely anti-war (which likely would have gotten it banned by SCAP).
I am not very far into it, but the war is quickly moving along. Perhaps the novel continues into the occupation period.


These are about mood rather than story, usually lacking resolution of the mystery. They are on novel themes, unusually for ghost stories. Oftentimes Japanese ghost stories just seem to recycle themes from olden times.
Well worth a look!



(Jack's note: 日没 "Sunset" was published 2020 and is unfortunately not yet available in English translation. I think it is available in Korean. Sugii Hikaru is, I think, the author of the light novel series, "Heaven's Memo Pad", where the MC is a NEET detective.
Jenny, did I get this correctly? thanks, Jack)

Post-war poverty, hard work, and death are the themes in the first two stories. Bits of these two stories remained with me over the years. It's hard to say any of the three have an overall plot; they don't start or end cleanly on any one subplot. Side characters abound within the subplots. I think the weakness in the third story also comes from this; it's as long as the other two put together and adds correspondingly many side characters.
The third story also doesn't seem to fit the themes I mentioned for the first two. It's set long after the war when life isn't so cheap, and the main characters are bar owners or entertainers in a seemingly thriving entertainment district. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with it. If I'd read it on its own I would have thought it an exciting, convoluted tale. It's just not as good as the other two.
Highly recommended.

I would call it literature about children, rather that children's literature. The MC is an adult trying to understanding her students.
This book was written in 1974. The amount of violence is small, but the level of it is shocking. Still, I wasn't prepared for when our MC showed her fellow teachers the correct way to pull the wings off flies and them applauding her for it. It's the sort of thing you do when you're too young to know better, and (like me) regret it when you're an adult.

Also currently reading I Am A Cat by Natsume Soseki. I've been on a Soseki kick lately and really enjoyed both Kokoro and Sanshiro.


Perhaps if I'd known exactly what it was, I wouldn't have bought it. But it was used and reasonably priced so I won't complain.

I was really close to dropping this book since the main character rambles needlessly long about mundane things, so much that for long portions of the book the story doesn't seem to move but I got to chapter 8 and it was quite a change of pace. It was the first chapter where I felt I was actually enjoying the novel. It is a shame that this wasn't shorter.

This is with a small group of friends who met to discuss early period - ~1400 Women’s Diaries and related literature.


HS girl who lives in the countryside meets HS boy who moves from Tokyo to the house next door. She finds him attractive, and infuriating, and ... you get the drill.
The positive: this boy is clearly suffering from depression, having been forced to leave the city when his parents moved to the countryside. The female MC is completely clueless about this, and instead thinks he's a jerk. Though maybe she'll figure things out as they get closer.
The negative: too many words. Every panel feels crammed with word and thought bubbles and handwritten text outside of them. Perhaps this means I'm 'getting my money's worth' out of this manga, though at the moment it feels like I'm slogging through a very slow-moving plot.

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

The biggest downside (to me) is it's all interpersonal drama. Maybe it'll be different for you. Maybe you don't get enough interpersonal drama in your own life, and want more. If so, this might be the book for you.


I also liked this book. My review is here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Yoshimasa and the Silver Pavilion was a little bit disappointing, but still a 3* read, e.g., fine. It's quite short so I read it in an evening and can't regret the loss of a single evening. On the other hand, I expected it to give me more in support of his thesis, and it appeared to be a stretch for him to deliver 170 or so pages of content. Did I need the 15 - 25 pages of detail on military movements? I did not. Was the 45+ pages devoted to Samurai leaders who were not Yoshimasa interesting? Yes, it was. But it still seemed like padding to get to a manuscript long enough to meet his commitment. It's a good quality non-fiction trifle.

This is a book of heavy, academic discourse on sex, gender, and sexuality. As the author clearly states in the introduction, it's not a history of Takarazuka.
Moreover, this book is 27 years old. Some 15 years ago there was a shift in the terminology on sex, gender, and sexuality as the trans movement became more visible, rejected terms it once embraced, and rejected a fair amount of second- and third-wave feminism. Having gone to college in the last millennium, I don't personally expect to see anything I'd consider objectionable. YMMV.

This is a book of heavy, academic discourse on sex, gender, and sexuality. As the author clearly states in the introduction, it's not a history of Taka..."
This has been on my tbr book stack of Japanese theatre arts for some time. I think we had a recommendation for this from a mutual friend who is very knowledgeable on the Takarazuka Revue. The Revue is also worth reading about.
The Takarazuka Revue (Japanese: 宝塚歌劇団, Hepburn: Takarazuka Kagekidan) is a Japanese all-female musical theatre troupe based in Takarazuka, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. Women play all roles in lavish, Broadway-style productions of musicals and stories adapted from films, novels, shōjo manga, and Japanese folktales. The Takarazuka Revue Company is a division of the Hankyu Railway company; all members of the troupe are employed by Hankyu. (Credit Wikipedia)
They have a very interesting history. I hope when I get to Takarazuka that my mileage will be in the hybrid range.
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