Category: Featured Writings (Page 6 of 14)

Featured writing

2016 Competition Winner

As the deadline nears for the 2019 Writers in Kyoto Competition (March 31), we turn back the clock to look again at some of the winning entries from years past  to see if there is anything that might serve as inspiration for those thinking of entering. (Full details of how to enter can be found …Read More

Travelling North (Rowe)

Travelling North by Simon Rowe Uramoto was short, in his thirties, with a buzz cut and a smile that practically broke his face in half. At eight p.m. he fired up his Fuso and told me to jump in. We would be carrying a consignment of senbei to Kōfu city in Yamanashi prefecture, he said. …Read More

Another Plane (Ken Rodgers)

ANOTHER PLANE by Ken Rodgers        One day, when he [Chan master Zhaozhao] was about to leave for the Five-Peak Mountain, a monk spoke this verse:      What mountain anywhere is not sacred?      Why go to the Five-Peaked Mountain with a walking stick?      Even if a lion with the golden mane manifests …Read More

Song Lyrics (Eric Bray)

Eric Bray Lyrics – Some Blues Some Happies a Bachata Unlike the CD these songs are arranged more or less in chronological order, with “This Day” and “Another Day” coming first, and “Cada Flor” coming last, as I wrote this song 30 years ago after coming to Japan from Mexico (hence the Spanish). I don’t …Read More

Ryoma! Review (Josh Yates)

Ryoma! The Life of Sakamoto Ryoma: Japanese Swordsman And Visionary By Shiba Ryotaro Translated By Paul McCarthy And Juliet Winters Carpenter. (526 pages) Reviewed by Ian (Josh) Yates For the first time the bestselling historian Shiba Ryotaro’s most epic tale will be translated for an English readership. Shiba spent many years, eight volumes and thousands …Read More

Elemental Japan (Jann Williams)

For the past few years Australian Jann Williams has been a valued supporter of Writers in Kyoto, while researching her magnum opus on the effect on Japan of the elements, whether physical or in the form of the Chinese and Buddhist five elements theories. At a lunch discussion on Oct 28 with a group of seven …Read More

Poems (James Woodham)

red-breasted, wings dull blue picking the way before me bird I cannot name   grey clouds, grey water egret spreads grey wings to fly the evening settles     calligraphic sky – soft pinks, grey pastel smudges the lake reflecting       smell of fresh cut grass – the crushed stems sweet as summer …Read More

Zen poem (Houser)

“Recalling a Light Moment” Amongst zen masters the moon mutant metaphor reflected in water a teaching apart from origin we world-wide witnesses myriad waves possessed of lunar largesse but obviously no moon seen in sea or tear to grasp nor mineral moon above only sunlight permits perception the reflected moon merely many waves like words …Read More

The Seven Forms of Infiltration (Kimura)

Author’s note: I am attempting to write a short novel (entitled The Seven Forms of Infiltration) that takes its inspiration from manga, Japanese comic books; the excerpt below is the first few pages of this novel. The heroine is a young woman who is training to be a ninja. For artistic effects, I use actual …Read More

My Kyoto Cats (David Duff)

My Kyoto Cats (Davd Duff) Kuma and Kinta were my first Kyoto cats, both blazoned with that distinctive tabby ‘M’ arched above their soft green eyes. Both had the same mother but different fathers so Kuma was a short hair while Kinta sported fluffy long hair. We shared a traditional Japanese home together and savored …Read More

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