Friday, September 29, 2006

Donald Richie on the East Coast in October



Donald Richie will visit the East Coast in October. Events include:

Friday, October 13:
Amherst College. “The Structure of Culture: The Japanese Example,” a lecture by Donald Richie for the Annual Meeting of the Friends of the Amherst College Library. The lecture and the following reception are free and open to the public. Mr. Richie is Amherst College's 2006-07 Robert Frost Library Fellow. Pruyne Lecture Hall, 115 Fayerweather. 4 p.m. Event details

Monday, October 16: Harvard University. Two events:
"Japan the Incongruous and Myself," a lecture by Donald Richie, presented by the Japan Society of Boston, Proogram on U.S.-Japan Relations and Reischauer Institute. Tsai auditorium (S010), CGIS South Bldg., 1730 Cambridge St., Cambridge. 4:00 - 5:30 p.m. Event details.

Donald Richie introduces a showing of Kenji Mizoguchi's "Street of Shame" for the Harvard Film Archive. Carpenter Center, 24 Quincy St., Cambridge. 6:30 p.m. Event details.

Tuesday, October 17: Yale University. Donald Richie and Professor Dudley Andrew present Japanese Film Aesthetics Across Film History: Shifting Paradigms of Japaneseness from the 30s to the Present, a workshop for undergraduate and graduate students. Henry R. Luce Hall, 34 Hillhouse Ave, Room 202. 5 p.m.

Wednesday, October 18: Yale University. "Japan the Incongruous and Myself," a lecture by Donald Richie at 4 p.m., followed by a screening of Mr. Richie's experimental films at 8 p.m. Linsly-Chittenden Hall, Room 101, 63 High Street. Event details.

Thursday, October 19: Yale University. Two events:
3:30 p.m. Experimental film workshop. Henry R. Luce Hall, 34 Hillhouse Ave, Room 103.

8 p.m. A special 35mm screening of Akira Kurosawa's Stray Dog (1949) introduced by Donald Richie. Screening followed by panel discussion with Donald Richie and faculty from EALL, Film Studies, and History. Whitney Humanities Center Auditorium, 53 Wall Street. Details.

Saturday, October 21: Museum of the Moving Image, New York City. The Japanese Film: A Tribute to Donald Richie runs October 20 - 29. Mr. Richie will be present on October 21 to introduce "Rashomon" at 5 p.m. and to introduce a showing of four of his own experimental films - "Life," "Atami Blues," "Dead Youth," and "Five Filosophical Fables" - at 2 p.m. Full details.

Sunday, October 22: Kinokuniya Bookstore, NYC. Book signing. 3 p.m. (Rockefeller Center) 10 W. 49th St., New York, NY 10020.

Monday, October 23: New York Film Festival's '50 Years of Janus Films' Series. Donald Richie introduces "Fires on the Plain," 6:15 p.m., Walter Reade Theater, 165 West 65th Street between Broadway & Amsterdam Avenues on the plaza level. The festival. The Series. This particular film.

Thursday, October 26: New York Film Festival's '50 Years of Janus Films' Series. Donald Richie introduces "High and Low," 1:00 p.m., Walter Reade Theater, 165 West 65th Street between Broadway & Amsterdam Avenues on the plaza level.. The festival. The Series. This particular film.

Updates will be made within this post. Nonetheless, please check with venues themselves for the most current info!

Haiku Apprentice reviewed in ForeWord

The September/October 2006 issue of ForeWord Magazine: Reviews of Good Books Independently Published includes Melanie Drane's review of The Haiku Apprentice by Abigail Friedman. The review is available online and in the print edition. Here's an excerpt from the insightful review:


Legions of Westerners have pursued idealized notions of “traditional” Japan through enchanted forays into ikebana, martial arts, ink painting, or tea ceremony. The pitfall of such adventures is that they (sometimes willfully) overlook the more complex, ambiguous reality of contemporary Japanese culture and politics. In contrast, Friedman distinguishes herself through depth and rigor of inquiry, which ultimately leads to a revised understanding of both her host country and herself.

Basho's Narrow Road reviewed at Reader Views




Basho's Narrow Road: Spring and Autumn Passages, the elegant Stone Bridge Press edition of "Narrow Road to the Interior" and the renga sequence, "A Farewell Gift to Sora," both by Matsuo Basho, was recently reviewed at Reader Views. From the review:


"Without the annotations, I would have enjoyed Basho’s story, but I would not have understood much of what was written...a beautiful story about Basho’s travels...the beauty of the countryside and the spirit of the people that he encounters."

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Yoshiyuki Tomino in Chicago!




Mobile Suit Gundam Director Yoshiyuki Tomino will be in Chicago in October for a series of events relating to the US cinema debut of the "Z-Gundam Anime Series," including a booksigning of
Mobile Suit Gundam at Border's:

October 6, 2006 from 12:30pm to 1:30 pm

Borders Books (State Street store)
150 North State Street
Chicago, IL 60601
(312) 606 - 0750

Borders Books
Information about Borders’ State Street store


Please check the FULL EVENT LIST for updates and specifics about many screenings, signings, and talks!

From the JASC's announcement:

The Japan America Society of Chicago is delighted to host a series of anime-related events as a prelude to the US debuts of Mobile Suit Z Gundam I, II, and III at the Chicago International Film Festival. With book signings, movie screenings, and panel discussions, the month of September is filled with action! Come and share the excitement as we gear up for the US release of Yoshiyuki Tomino’s Mobile Suit Z Gundam I, II, and III at the Chicago International Film Festival!

New film to be based on Teruyo Nogami book


Following the enormous success of the samurai trilogy that included 2004 Academy Award nominated film “The Twilight Samurai,” “The Hidden Blade” and most recently “Bushi No Ichibun” (original title), Shochiku Films will produce and distribute legendary director Yoji Yamada’s next film – a period drama titled “Kabei” (Japanese working title), based on the nonfiction novel "Chichi eno requiem” ("Requiem for a Father") written by Teruyo Nogami, author of Waiting on the Weather: Making Movies with Akira Kurosawa, forthcoming from Stone Bridge Press. The new film will star Sayuri Yoshinaga.

"Chichi e no requiem” describes the wartime Showa period through the eyes of a mother. "I would like to make this film with homage to [every mother] who held her family in her arms and lived through hard times like a raging roller storm,” Yamada commented.

Here's the official press release from Shochiku.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Four Immigrants Manga encountered in Nikkei Family Magazine



The current issue of Nikkei Family Magazine includes an article by Chiori Santiago, "Finding Ourselves in the Pages of a Book," which includes discussion of Four Immigrants Manga by Henry (Yoshitaka) Kiyama, translated and with an introduction by Frederik L. Schodt.

An excerpt from the feature:

"Four Immigrants is immediately engaging because it demonstrates that early arrivals survived partly through their sense of humor. What strikes me about more recent retrospectives of [Japanese American] history is their grim and mournful view of the injustices unquestionably heaped upon us; a litany of hurt recorded by younger writers who expect better treatment and can enjoy the luxury of indignation."

Leza Lowitz's Sun and Moon Yoga in the Japan Times



On Saturday, September 16, The Japan Times featured an article on Leza Lowitz, author of Yoga Poems, which has just been released in a gorgeous paperback edition.

Lowitz on writing Yoga Poems:

"The first line came to me one evening in 1995 as I was struggling in The Downward Dog: 'Within my body, there's a city.' After that, as I practiced poses, the poetry just began to flow."

Lowitz on her yoga studio in Tokyo, Sun and Moon Yoga, which currently has some 1,000 students:


"The students who like our down-to-earth attitude are a wonderful mix. Fifty percent are Japanese, and they come, they say, because they feel they can be themselves."

Monday, September 18, 2006

Stone Bridge Press Announces Spring Season Titles




Stone Bridge Press has a very exciting Spring Season in the works. Here's the list:

APRIL

The Art of Robotech: The Shadow Chronicles
by Tommy Yune, with a foreword by Carl Macek
April, $19.95, Paper, 144 pages, 8.5” x 11”, 200 color illustrations
1-933330-29-5

A Dictionary of Japanese Buddhist Terms
by Hisao Inagaki, with contributions by PG O’Neill
April, Paper
1-933330-05-8

Family Crests of Japan
April, $18.95, Paper, 156 pages, 8.25” x 7.875”, 850+ b&w illustrations & photos
Reprint
1-933330-30-9

Indonesian fables of Feats and Fortunes
by Kuniko Sugiura, with illustrations by Koji Honda
April, $16.95, Case, 32 pages, 8.25” x 11.25”, 24 color illustrations 0-893469-50-5

Indonesian Tales of Treasures and Brides
by Kuniko Sugiura, with ollustrations by Koji Honda
April, $16.95, Case, 32 pages, 8.25” x 11.25”, 24 color illustrations 0-893469-50-5

MAY

Anime Classics Zettai!: 100 Must-See Japanese Animation Masterpieces
by Brian Camp and Julie Davis
May, $18.95, Paper, 400 pages, 7” x 7”
1-93333-22-8

China for Businesswomen: A Strategic Guide to Travel, Negotiating, and Cultural Differences
by Tracey Wilen-Daugenti
May, $16.95, Paper, 200 pages, 6” x 9”
1-933330-28-7

The Films of Kiyoshi Kurosawa: Master of Fear
by Jerry White
May, $19.95, Paper, 224 pages, 7” x 9”, 15 b&w photographs
1-933330-21-X

A Tractate on Japanese Aesthetics
by Donald Richie
April, $9.95, Paper, 80 pages, 5” x 7”
1-933330-23-6

JULY

Crazy for Kanji: A Student’s Guide to the Wonderful World of Japanese Characters
by Eve Kushner
July, $19.95, Paper, 200 pages, 8.5” x 11”, 200 b&w illustrations and charts
1-93333-20-1


STONE BRIDGE CLASSICS

APRIL

The Book of Tea
by Kakuzo Okakura
April, $9.95, Paper, 128 pages, 5.25” x 7.5”
1-933330-17-1

A Diplomat in Japan: The Inner History of the Critical Years in the Evolution of Japan when the Ports were Opened and the Monarchy Restored
by Sir Ernest Satow
April, $14.95, Paper, 672 pages, 5.25” x 7.5”, 3 b&w illustrations and photographs
1-933330-16-3

Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art: An Outline History of East Asiatic Design
by Ernest F. Fenellosa
April, $18.95, Paper, 800 pages, 5.25” x 7.5”, 257 b&w illustrations and photographs
1-933330-26-0

The Ideals of the East: With Special Reference to the Art of Japan
by Kakuzo Okakura
April, $10.95, Paper, 200 pages, 5.25” x 7.5”
1-933330-25-2

Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things
by Lafcadio Hearn
April, $10.95, Paper, 160 pages, 5.25” x 7.5”, 2 b&w illustrations
1-933330-24-4

The Mikado’s Empire: A History of Japan from the Age of Gods to the Meiji Era (660 BC – AD 1872)
by William Elliot Griffis
April, $14.95, Paper, 512 pages, 5.25” x 7.5”, 2 b&w illustrations
1-933330-18-X

Things Japanese: Being Notes on Various Subjects Connected with Japan
by Basil Hall Chamberlain
April, $14.95, Paper, 540 pages, 5.25” x 7.5”
1-933330-27-9

Unbeaten Tracks in Japan: An Account of Travels in the Interior including Visits to the Aborigines of Yezo and the Shrine of Nikko
by Isabella L. Bird
$12.95, Paper, 352 pages, 5.25” x 7.5”, 39 b&w illustrations
1-933330-19-8

Friday, September 15, 2006

Gilles Poitras at Japantown Anime Faire this weekend in San Francisco



Gilles Poitras, author of The Anime Companion, The Anime Companion 2, and Anime Essentials, will be speaking on spotting Japanese culture in anime at the Japantown Anime Faire in San Francisco this weekend.

Poitras's presentation is at 3 p.m. on Sunday, September 17th at the Kintetsu Mall, Suite 320, 1737 Post Street, San Francisco. Check out this detailed online schedule for more information. See you there!

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

In the Pool reviewed by the Midwest Book Review



In the September edition of Small Press Bookwatch, the Midwest Book Review agrees that Hideo Okuda's In the Pool is "deliciously twisted":

Award-winning Japanese author Hideo Okuda presents In The Pool, a wildly popular Japanese novel that has been successfully adapted to a major Japanese motion picture. "Doctor of Neurology" Ichiro Irabu is a therapist for the image-conscious and all too often mentally pressured people of Japan, and his odd methodology of sharing his patients' stress-related problems and making them much worse before they get better distinguishes him sharply from his colleagues. His patients include a man who suffers a constant and painful erection, a pretty young woman convinced that every man she meets on the street is a stalker, a high school student addicted to text messaging the "friends" he desperately craves, and a journalist terrified his house will burn down should he leave it. A deliciously twisted commentary on human neuroses, with wit and insight that translates seamlessly between cultures. Highly recommended.

Native American in the Land of the Shogun reviewed at Reader Views




Frederik L. Schodt's Native American in the Land of the Shogun reviewed at Reader Views. The entire review is online, but here's an excerpt:

"Frederik L. Schodt has been meticulous in his background research.
..[An] important narrative on the explorations and settlement of the Pacific Northwest, the whaling industry, and 19th Century Japan."

Friday, September 08, 2006

Abigail Friedman's haiku featured at tinywords: haiku daily



A haiku by Abigail Friedman, author of The Haiku Apprentice, appears on the tinywords website and email feed today. Here it is:
grass tickling
my toes
o-bon festival
Be sure to visit tinywords and subscribe to their haiku emails!
Abigail Friedman's blog, Stone Lantern, is also a great resource.

In the Pool reviewed at Pacific Dreams



Pacific Dreams, Inc., which focuses on Us/Japanese business relations, recently reviewed In the Pool.

From the review:

"In the Pool is a fun and interesting splash...Dr. Irabu's techniques and ideas collide with not only his profession, but his national culture, and although this isn't always comfortable for his patients, it makes for pure entertainment for his readers."

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

The Haiku Apprentice reviewed in J SELECT

The Haiku Apprentice, Abigail Friedman's eloquent memoir of learning to write haiku in Japan while stationed there as a diplomat, is reviewed in the September/October issue of J Select.


Here's an excerpt from the review:

"An honest account of one woman's cultural journey...Friedman's intimate conversations with sensei Kuroda Momoko, one of Japan's foremost masters of haiku, and scores of other haiku devotees throughout the book help answer myriad questions about the poetry that have long remained a mystery to casual observers."

Star Sighting! Yoga Poems at Fred Segal!

Two Stone Bridge Press titles - Yoga Poems by Leza Lowitz and Right under the big sky, I don't wear a hat by Hosai Ozaki - were recently sighted at Fred Segal Santa Monica. That's right - the Fred Segal - hip collection of boutiques for the famous, the quirky, and the famously quirky.


With Yoga Poems out now in a gorgeous, affordable paperback version, and Right under the big sky, I don't wear a hat continuing to inspire readers around the world, this is one star sighting worth its weight in books.