Category: Featured Writers (Page 12 of 26)

Writers in focus

Way Back When (James Woodham)

Way Back When On my doorstep happy as an utter fool I gaze at Mount Hira. Wind in the arms of the May-leaved trees, a chill on my skin. I think of Cid Corman and a friend who knows Gary Snyder cloud on the mountain. Wind soughing the leaves, a drop of rain now the …Read More

WiK Competiton 2019 Second Prize

“Sunrise Over the Kamogawa” by Ina Sanjana (UK citizen living in Kyoto) From the judges: “Homelessness within Kyoto is a rarely discussed topic, and Kamogawa Park is often viewed more as a recreational area for joggers, cyclists, children, dog walkers, couples, and instrumentalists. The judges appreciated this alternative perspective.” Sunrise Over the Kamogawa In the …Read More

WiK Competiton 2019 Third Prize (Kimura)

[In keeping with long-time legends of the ghosts and spirits that reside in Kyoto, this piece reminded the judges of the Kwaidan stories gathered by Lafcadio Hearn, simultaneously chilling and tender.] Yurei Ame/ Ghost Candyby Marianne Kimura, Canadian, resident in Kyoto Who was that? The same woman as last night and the night before. The …Read More

2019 Competition Kyoto winner (Ramsden)

Kyomojo (by Kevin Ramsden, British, Kyoto resident) A one, two three … Scoffin’ down a bento / slippin’ in a sento / Air BnB for rento Yamazaki whisky / pickled veg from Nishiki / horumon very risky Rubbery wakame / shellin’ edamame / dollars? sorry, dame Peko chan and poko, have a go at taiko …Read More

Kyoto Soundscape

Radio Gidayū Created by Allen S. Weiss and Daisuke Ishida for the Klangkunst program of Deutschlandradio Kultur Berlin, 2014, commissioned by Marcus Gammel, Radio Gidayū is simultaneously a soundscape of Kyoto, a sonic travel diary, the evocation of a utopian space, and a work of musique concrète. It is inspired by the art of gidayū, …Read More

Richard Lloyd Parry talk

‘Kyoto gaijin are different. Tokyo gaijin are there for money or sex. Kyoto gaijin are here for Zen, or lacquerware, or Heian poetry, or to learn shakuhachi. Nearly everyone plays shakuhachi!’ So began the absorbing talk by Richard Lloyd Parry at Ryukoku’s new stylish building on the Omiya campus, next to the World Heritage site …Read More

Lovsic in Kyoto

News of a new book set in the contemporary city. The Kindle version on amazon japan has a discount for ¥988. Here’s the press release, which is a model of marketing. We’ll carry a review of the book later in the year… Lovesic in Kyoto Seen through the lens of Buddhist wisdom, Lovesic in Kyoto …Read More

Lloyd Parry’s ‘People Who Eat Darkness’

Book review by Josh Yates People Who Eat Darkness: The True Story of a Young Woman Who Vanished from the Streets of Tokyo – and the Evil by Richard Lloyd Parry (Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2012,454pp) ***************** “Japan’s a safe country” “Women can walk around in the middle of the night and not worry” These …Read More

Reggie Pawle presentation

Reggie Pawle combines being a Kyoto psychotherapist with being a Zen practitioner, which has enabled him to explore the world within while helping others find their true selves. Zen and psychotherapy go back to the 1950s in fact, with Carl Jung holding ground-breaking discussions in 1958 with Hisamatsu Shinichi, a Zen philosopher with the Kyoto …Read More

Donald Keene in Kyoto

The following is taken from ‘Donald Keene: The American Who Became Japanese’ by Oliver Jia. (Click here to see original.) After the American occupation of Japan ended in 1952, restrictions on outsiders entering the country finally eased. Acquiring funding to study in Japan proved to be difficult for Keene because the committees looked for applicants …Read More

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