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04 - A book set in Japan (host of the 2020 Olympics)
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Kristin
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Jan 05, 2020 12:05PM

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such a great story, and an easy read. It's one of my favorites :-)



The Guest Cat by Takashi Hiraide

It's calm and describes lots of everyday life. It was a nice read, but I won't read it again. Focus was on the main human characters and the cat to me felt like - as the title says - only a guest.
If Cats Disappeared from the World by Genki Kawamura

Also a calm book, not that much about cats, I liked it a bit better than the first one. Strong message, though I'll probably won't read it again.
Not set in Japan, but as I'm listing cat books here, I'm also going to read Cleo: How an Uppity Cat Helped Heal a Family by Helen Brown.

And also not set in Japan, but I highly recommend A Street Cat Named Bob: How One Man and His Cat Found Hope on the Streets by James Bowen. It deals with topics like being homeless and heroin addiction.






Is it "A book set in Japan, where the 2020 Olympics were supposed to be held"
or " A book set in a fictional or non-Earth world, where the 2020 Olympics are actually taking place?"
or "Skip this prompt. Read an imaginary book where the imaginary Olympics are being held."?
And I just want to add that I'm INCREDIBLY frustrated that I can't access books from my library right now, since they're closed (ebooks don't work for me.) And I don't exactly have the budget to actually PURCHASE books right now either! I may not be able to finish this years reading challenge at all.

Ruth wrote: "Now that there aren't going to be any 2020 Olympics, is this prompt going to change?
Is it "A book set in Japan, where the 2020 Olympics were supposed to be held"
or " A book set in a fictional o..."
The way I see it, the prompt is "a book set in Japan" and the parenthetical "host of the 2020 Olympics" is there just to explain why this prompt was grouped with all of the prompts that involve "20." Japan is still the host, it's just postponed (so far), and I don't know if they will be changing the title of these Olympics to be "2021" or not.
So this prompt does not change, it is still to read a book set in Japan.
Is it "A book set in Japan, where the 2020 Olympics were supposed to be held"
or " A book set in a fictional o..."
The way I see it, the prompt is "a book set in Japan" and the parenthetical "host of the 2020 Olympics" is there just to explain why this prompt was grouped with all of the prompts that involve "20." Japan is still the host, it's just postponed (so far), and I don't know if they will be changing the title of these Olympics to be "2021" or not.
So this prompt does not change, it is still to read a book set in Japan.



The past few years, I've finished the challenge by August. That clearly isn't going to happen this year, though I should probably continue to reserve books for prompts so that if my library only reopens for a short time, I'll get that stack of books to complete the challenge in a fairly short time. I'll turn to ebooks only if I can't access enough paper books by November or so. I may also change my mind about "only ticking off one challenge per book" if I find that it makes a difference when time is running short.

I have turned to e-books because my library is also closed.




Is it "A book set in Japan, where the 2020 Olympics were supposed to be held"
or " A book set in ..."
With you the prompt is still a book set in Japan. A prompt im finding hard to fill






Sneha wrote: "Does the The Memory Police count? Its set in an unnamed island but clearly the setting felt like it was in Japan."
I think that's up to you.
I think that's up to you.

A book that focuses on the female body & revolves around the stories of three women in Japan.
Will be published April 17, 2020"
I just finished this book for this prompt, and while I enjoyed the much of it, I think I would have enjoyed it more if I were more familiar with Japanese mythology. I found it hard to keep the various terms straight and was constantly checking the glossary, which I found much harder to do on my kindle. In a paperback, all I have to do is stick a bookmark in it, and then it's easy to switch back and forth.
I did download the sequel, maybe the different terms will be less confusing second-time around...




Books mentioned in this topic
Brilliance of the Moon (other topics)Convenience Store Woman (other topics)
Japanese Fairy Tales (other topics)
Food Wars!: Shokugeki no Soma, Vol. 1 (other topics)
What's Left of Me Is Yours (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Yei Theodora Ozaki (other topics)Yūto Tsukuda (other topics)
Clarissa Goenawan (other topics)
Kenneth Rexroth (other topics)
Hiro Arikawa (other topics)
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