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1942, The Year That Tried Men's Souls  •  Winston Groom
HISTORY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 480 PAGES
Groom (Forrest Gump, A Storm in Flanders) brings to life the heroism, tragedy and trials of America's entry into the Pacific, including the brutal fight for Guadalcanal, in this popular, page-turning history. (WAR122, $15.00)
 
36 Views of Mount Fuji, On Finding Myself in Japan  •  Cathy Davidson
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2006 •  PAPER  • 288 PAGES
A thoughtful set of witty reflections on Japan, Japanese culture and the adventure of living overseas by a talented writer who taught at an all women's university in Japan in the 1980s. This new edition includes an afterward by the author, who went back to see friends in 2005 (whose lives were changed by the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake). (JPN65, $21.95)
  36 Views of Mount Fuji, On Finding Myself in Japan
About This Life, Journeys on the Threshold of Memory  •  Barry Lopez
ANTHOLOGY •  1999 •  PAPER  • 273 PAGES
A collection of essays on far-flung travels -- both actual and internal -- by the wonderful writer and traveler. Lopez includes Galapagos, Hokkaido, Bonaire and Antarctica among the thoughtful essays. As in all his work, the book is a rare combination of fine writing, adventure, insight and personal reflection. (GEN42, $13.95)
  About This Life, Journeys on the Threshold of Memory
After Dark  •  Haruki Murakami
LITERATURE •  2008 •  PAPER
Haruki Murakami's short cinematic novel, his 12th work of fiction, traces three interlinking stories over one long night in Tokyo. Set entirely between midnight and dawn, musicians, prostitutes, salaryman and students meet and mingle to haunting effect. (JPN251, $13.95)
  After Dark
Ainu, Spirit of a Northern People  •  William Fitzhugh
ARCHAEOLOGY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 416 PAGES
A magnificently illustrated, handsomely produced overview of Ainu history, art and culture. Dozens of experts contributed to this companion volume to the Smithsonian exhibition, edited by William Fitzhugh. (JPN101, $49.95)
 
Anthology of Japanese Literature from the Earliest Era to the Mid-Nineteenth Century  •  Donald Keene
ANTHOLOGY •  1988 •  PAPER  • 442 PAGES
A classic first published in 1955, this book presents great Japanese literature over the ages. Followed by "Modern Japanese Literature" (JPN72). (JPN12, $15.95)
 
Architecture and Authority in Japan  •  William H. Coaldrake
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1996 •  HARD COVER
A study of Japanese architecture and its relationship to political and religious power structures throughout the history of the country. (JPN112, $59.95)
 
The Art of Setting Stones & Other Writings from the Japanese Garden  •  Marc P. Keane
NATURAL HISTORY •  2002 •  PAPER  • 196 PAGES
In these lyrical essays Kyoto-resident and landscape architect Marc Peter Keane takes eight gardens of his adopted home as a point of departure for reflections on nature, religion and aesthetics. Keane is also the author of Japanese Garden Design. (JPN124, $16.95)
  The Art of Setting Stones & Other Writings from the Japanese Garden
An Artist in the Floating World  •  Kazuo Ishiguro
LITERATURE •  1989 •  PAPER  • 206 PAGES
In his second novel, Ishiguro weaves a tale of an aging artist in postwar Japan. In the midst of his daughter's engagement preparations, he reflects on his career, questioning his decision to become a political painter and wondering whether he should have remained a traditional painter of tea houses and geisha. (JPN58, $13.95)
 
The Assassin's Touch  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  2006 •  PAPER
(JPN225, $6.99)
 
Audrey Hepburn's Neck, A Novel  •  Alan Brown
LITERATURE •  1997 •  PAPER  • 304 PAGES
This exquisite short novel follows the adventures of 23-year-old Toshi, a young man from the rural north who makes his way to crazy, contemporary Tokyo. Apart from its stunning language, strong images and characters, this prize-winning novel also captures the eclectic, mixed-up society of contemporary Japan. (JPN14, $20.95)
  Audrey Hepburn's Neck, A Novel
The Battle for Okinawa  •  Yahara, Hirochimi
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1997 •  PAPER  • 245 PAGES
First published in Japan in 1973, this enthralling personal account of the last great battle of WWII is from the viewpoint of the the senior staff officer of the Japanese 32nd Army. (JPN222, $19.95)
 
The Birds of Heaven, Travels With Cranes  •  Peter Matthiessen  •  Robert Bateman
NATURAL HISTORY •  2003 •  PAPER  • 352 PAGES • COMING IN
Matthiessen traveled with the cranes to Siberia, Japan, Mongolia, North America, China, Bhutan, East Africa, Australia, India and Texas for this handsomely illustrated, informative book. Organizing the book geographically, he interweaves his travels with insightful commentary on the conservation, ecology, and the significance of the crane in art and culture. With color paintings by Robert Bateman. (BRD11, $16.00)
 
The Birds of Japan  •  Mark Brazil
REFERENCE •  1991 •  HARD COVER  • 466 PAGES • COMING IN
Brazil's landmark guide, with illustrations by Masayuki Yabuuchi, covers in detail 583 species of birds in Japan. Based on extensive field work, most of the book is devoted to a comprehensive overview of the status and distribution of birds in Japan. With six color plates and 60 black-and-white drawings. (JPN214, $99.95)
 
Black Arrow  •  I. J. Parker
MYSTERY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 352 PAGES
In this installment of I.J. Parker's Sugawara Akitada series, set in eleventh-century Japan., detective Akitada is working as provisional governor in the isolated Northern city of Echigo, where there is a series of brutal slayings. (JPN201, $14.00)
  Black Arrow
Black Lotus  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  2002 •  PAPER
(JPN229, $6.99)
 
Black Rain  •  Masuji Ibuse  •  Johan Bester
LITERATURE •  1994 •  PAPER  • 304 PAGES
(JPN192, $12.00)
 
The Blue-Eyed Tarokaja, A Donald Keene Anthology  •  Donald Keene
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1996 •  HARD COVER  • 290 PAGES
Personal, eccentric and well informed, the renowned professor of Japanese literature and distinguished translator offers miscellaneous essays and recollections of life and culture in Japan. Keene tackles Japanese music, language, society and literature in these insightful pieces. (JPN15, $35.50)
 
Botchan  •  Natsume Soseki
LITERATURE •  2005 •  HARD COVER  • 172 PAGES
(JPN191, $22.00)
  Botchan
Buddhism, A Concise Introduction  •  Huston Smith  •  Philip Novak
RELIGION •  2004 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
This two-part primer, derived in part from Smith's bestselling World Religions focuses in the first half on Theravada Buddhism comparing South Asian and other traditions. The second part, written by Smith's student Philip Novak, looks at Buddhism in the west. (ASA41, $12.95)
 
The Inland Sea  •  Donald Richie
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 255 PAGES • FAVORITE
Richie's book, on its surface a travel account, is a beautiful reflection on all things Japanese by one of the country's most acute observers. Anyone with an interest in Japan would enjoy this book, those on a voyage through the inland sea even more so. Written after many decades in Japan, The Inland Sea is among the best of the master's many books. Arturo Silva, who edited the Donald Richie Reader, calls it his masterpiece (and a work of fiction). (JPN13, $16.95)
  The Inland Sea
Buddhist Art and Architecture  •  Robert Fisher
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1993 •  PAPER  • 216 PAGES
A wide-ranging, illustrated survey of Buddhist art, architecture and iconography in the excellent World of Art series. It includes examples from throughout Asia. (ASA30, $18.95)
  Buddhist Art and Architecture
Bundori  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  1997 •  PAPER
(JPN232, $7.99)
 
Cha-No-Yu, The Japanese Tea Ceremony  •  Arthur L. Sadler  •  A.L. Sadler
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1991 •  PAPER  • 265 PAGES
An enlightening, exhaustively detailed guide to the disciplined ceremony associated with drinking tea in Japan, first published in 1933. With a genealogy of tea masters, helpful illustrations and a few black-and-white photographs. A reprint of the 1962 edition (in very small type). (JPN59, $14.95)
 
Chrysanthemum and the Sword, Patterns of Japanese Culture  •  Ruth Benedict  •  Ezra Vogel
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2006 •  PAPER  • 324 PAGES
Published in the aftermath of World War II, this brilliant exploration of the Japanese psyche and culture retains its interest today, as much for its perspective on the West as for insights about the Japanese character. Benedict, who also wrote Patterns of Culture, was a respected anthropologist of the time. Written with the full cooperation of the Office of War Information, Benedict based her study on interviews with hundreds of Japanese, many of them immigrants to America. (JPN23, $15.00)
 
Classic Japanese Inns and Country Getaways  •  Margaret Price
GUIDEBOOK •  1990 •  PAPER  • 288 PAGES
The essential, illustrated guide to the ryokan of your desire, organized by prefecture and with a good introduction to the evolution of the Japanese inn. Price, a journalist and writer who has lived in Japan since 1982, describes favorite inns, often ancient, sometimes luxurious, throughout the country. (JPN182, $23.00)
  Classic Japanese Inns and Country Getaways
Comrade Loves of the Samurai  •  Ihara Saikaku
LITERATURE •  2007 •  PAPER  • 160 PAGES
During the Tokugawa period, romantic relationships among samurai was permissible. This novel from the great poet explores this phenomenon. (JPN241, $14.95)
 
The Concubine's Tattoo  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  2000 •  PAPER
(JPN231, $6.99)
 
Confessions of a Mask  •  Meredith Weatherby  •  Yukio Mishima
LITERATURE •  1988 •  PAPER  • 254 PAGES
Inspired by historical events, this powerful book is the story of the monk who burned the Temple of the Golden Pavilion in Kyoto. It's an unsettling portrait of society in Post War Japan. On another level, the book tells of the coming of age of a complex, tragic figure who, among other things, struggles with his homosexuality. Mishimi is also the author of "The Sailor Who Fell from Grace With the Sea." (JPN18, $12.95)
  Confessions of a Mask
A Cook's Tour, Global Adventures in Extreme Cuisines  •  Anthony Bourdain
FOOD •  2002 •  PAPER  • 274 PAGES
In this deliciously funny book, Bourdain eats his way around the globe on a quest for the perfect (or prefectly odd) meal. From fried Mars Bars in Glasgow to cobra hearts in Cambodia, there's nowhere this wise-cracking chef won't go and nothing he won't try. (TVL90, $14.95)
 
Crawling at Night  •  Nani Power
LITERATURE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 240 PAGES
Two nocturnal denizens of New York, a widower from Japan and a single mother from North Carolina, stumble through the city and their troubled pasts in this atmospheric debut novel from a former sushi chef. (NYC83, $13.00)
 
Dave Barry Does Japan  •  Dave Barry
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1993 •  PAPER
Good will ambassador and columnist Barry takes no prisoners in this outrageous commentary on Japan and its culture. (JPN234, $13.95)
 
Deep River  •  Shusaku Endo
LITERATURE •  1996 •  PAPER
One of many novels by the 20th-century Japanese writer, a Roman Catholic whose many works explore chistianity and morals. This one is set among a group of Japanese tourists in India. (JPN159, $13.95)
 
Dogs and Demons, Tales from the Dark Side of Japan  •  Alex Kerr
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2001 •  PAPER  • 320 PAGES
Alex Kerr, a long-term resident of Japan, documents the changing economy and current economic crisis in this provocative book. He sees the effects of a myopic modernization everywhere, from a damaged environment to the collapse of the tourism industry. In making a case for examining Japan with the emphasis of simply the economy, Kerr creates a fascinating, compelling work. (JPN55, $17.00)
 
The Dragon King's Palace  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  2004 •  PAPER
(JPN227, $6.99)
 
The Dragon Scroll  •  I. J. Parker
MYSTERY •  2005 •  PAPER  • 432 PAGES
In this installment of the popular mystery series set in eleventh-century Japan, detective Sugawara Akitada travels to the province of Kazusa to investigate a theft. (JPN202, $13.00)
  The Dragon Scroll
During the Rains & Flowers in the Shade  •  Nagai Kafu  •  Lane Dunlop
LITERATURE •  1994 •  PAPER  • 223 PAGES
Two 1930s novellas of seamy Tokyo by the writer whom Donald Richie called the "finest of Tokyo chroniclers." "During the Rains" takes as its subject a working girl of the Ginza district, while "Flowers in the Shade" follows a man whose lover (and breadwinner) is a prostitute. Throughout both books, Nagai Kafu laces lingering, nostalgic descriptions of Tokyo neighborhoods. (JPN106, $21.95)
 
East Asia, Tradition and Transformation  •  John Fairbank  •  Edwin O. Reischauer  •  Albert M. Craig
HISTORY •  1990 •  HARD COVER  • 1027 PAGES
A sprawling history of China and Japan, covering ancient through modern times. (ASA18, $171.96)
 
East Wind Melts the Ice: A Memoir Through the Seasons  •  Liza Crihfield Dalby
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2007 •  HARD COVER  • 318 PAGES • NEW
Dalby (Geisha) uses poetic forms of Japan's 11th-century Heian Court to give shape to her reflections and experiences in this captivating almanac. (JPN246, $24.95)
  East Wind Melts the Ice: A Memoir Through the Seasons
Empire of Signs  •  Roland Barthes
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1983 •  PAPER  • 109 PAGES
In these marvelous, original and exasperating reflections, the great French semiotician comments of the signs and meaning of things Japanese. With chapters on chopsticks, pachinko, packages, bowing, food and other Japanese cultural artifacts. Donald Richie includes Empire of Signs in a short list of best books on Japan. Barthes, who visited Japan in the 1960s, uses his experiences and concrete observations as a point of departure. (JPN163, $13.00)
  Empire of Signs
The Empty Mirror, Experiences in a Japanese Zen Monastery  •  Janwillem van de Wettering
RELIGION •  1999 •  PAPER  • 160 PAGES
A candid account of novelist van de Wetering's experiences as a novice monk at Daitoku-ji Zen monastery in Kyoto in the late 1950s. Van de Wetering is the Dutch author of a wildly popular series of detective novels. (JPN164, $13.95)
 
The Essential Haiku, Versions of Basho, Buson and Issa  •  Robert Hass
LITERATURE •  1994 •  PAPER  • 329 PAGES
A felicitous pairing of translator and text. Like the former Poet Laureate Robert Hass, who edited the volume, these three Japanese masters -- Basho (1644-1694), Buson (1716-1783) and Issa (1763-1827) -- looked out of their windows often and in many moods. They wrote glintingly, but deeply, of the natural world and their places therein. (JPN93, $16.00)
  The Essential Haiku, Versions of Basho, Buson and Issa
Everyday Life in Traditional Japan  •  Charles Dunn  •  Laurence Broderick
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1998 •  PAPER  • 208 PAGES
A fascinating cultural portrait of daily life in Tokugawa Japan under rule of the shogun, with details on religion, courtship, commerce and class relations. With illustrations and chapters devoted "The Samurai," "The Farmers" and "Actors and Outcasts." (JPN68, $14.95)
  Everyday Life in Traditional Japan
First Fish, First People, Salmon Tales of the North Pacific Rim  •  Meg McHutchinson  •  Judith Roche  •  One Reel
ANTHOLOGY •  1998 •  PAPER  • 204 PAGES
An anthology of essays, poems and histories by a pan-Pacific cast of writers whose various cultures -- including Ainu (Japan), Coast Salish (British Columbia), Spokane (Washington) and Ulchi (Siberia) -- have traditionally identified with the salmon. It's a lovely book, illustrated throughout with black-and-white photographs, and made the more poignant by the salmon's decline in the coastal regions. (PNW116, $24.95)
  First Fish, First People, Salmon Tales of the North Pacific Rim
Five by Endo  •  Shusaku Endo
LITERATURE •  2000 •  PAPER  • 96 PAGES
A posthumously published collection of short stories by the 20th-century Japanese writer, a Roman Catholic whose many works explore Christianity and morals. (JPN158, $7.00)
 
Five Women Who Loved Love  •  Ihara Saikaku
LITERATURE •  1955 •  PAPER  • 264 PAGES
An erotic Japanese novel first published in 1686. (JPN242, $15.95)
 
The Floating World  •  James Michener  •  Howard A. Link
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1990 •  PAPER  • 453 PAGES
Michener delves into the history of Japanese printmaking, a tradition that has endured for two centuries because of the government's strict regulations and the country's geographic isolation. (JPN57, $27.95)
 
Fodor's Exploring Japan  •  David Scott
GUIDEBOOK •  2008 •  PAPER  • 288 PAGES
A compact guide to the history, culture and attractions of Japan, this guidebook published in England features color photographs, maps and a region-by-region overview of attractions. It includes walking tours and good neighborhood maps. (JPN33, $22.00)
  Fodor's Exploring Japan
Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941-1945  •  Christopher Bayly  •  Timothy Harper
HISTORY •  2005 •  HARD COVER  • 608 PAGES
A gripping history of Britain's WWII campaigns in India, Burma and Malaysia by two Cambridge University historians. The authors draw on multiple perspectives, including that of the Japanese, in this authoritative history of famous and horrifying battles. With 34 black-and-white photographs and seven maps. (ASA45, $29.95)
 
Frommer's Japan  •  Frommer's
GUIDEBOOK •  2006 •  PAPER  • 672 PAGES
A comprehensive, practical guide to travel in Japan. (JPN117, $24.99)
 
Gambling with Virtue, Japanese Women and the Search for Self in a Changing Nation  •  Nancy Ross Rosenberger
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2001 •  PAPER  • 344 PAGES
In this intriguing work of social analysis, Rosenberger follows the fates of Japanese women from the 1970s through the 1990s, looking carefully at changing experiences, demands and notions of identity. A cultural anthropologist by training, the author builds a portrait of Japanese society through the personal experiences of dozens of women. (JPN129, $26.00)
 
The Gardens of Japan  •  Teiji Itoh
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1998 •  HARD COVER  • 244 PAGES
A beautifully illustrated overview of the history and tradition of Japanese gardens featuring 75 color photographs, accompanying essays by professor Itoh (with Donald Richie) and a guide to 50 of Japan's best-known gardens. (JPN38, $60.00)
  The Gardens of Japan
Geisha, A Life  •  Mineko Iwasaki
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2003 •  PAPER  • 368 PAGES
The memoir of a celebrated Geisha, rich in details, culture and traditions of Kyoto's Gion Kobu district. Iwasaki, now in her 50s, was also the chief source of information for Arthur Golden's best-selling "Memoirs of a Geisha." (JPN131, $15.00)
  Geisha, A Life
Getting Wet, Adventures in the Japanese Bath  •  Eric Talmadge
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2006 •  HARD COVER  • 256 PAGES
Talmadge reflects on Japanese bathing culture and the obsession with finding the perfect environment (bath "theme parks" are one), the perfect temperature, and the perfect odor to achieve the ideal bath. The long history and science of Japanese bathing mingle with a study of water's healing powers and sound advice on where and when to visit the baths. (JPN197, $22.00)
  Getting Wet, Adventures in the Japanese Bath
The Girl Who Played Go  •  Shan Sa  •  Adriana Hunter
LITERATURE •  2004 •  PAPER  • 320 PAGES
An accomplished novel set in a Manchurian city in the war-torn 1930s, where a spirited 16-year-old Chinese girl and a young Japanese soldier find peace in a game of Go. Winner of the 2004 Kiriyama Prize, the novel captures the turmoil of the changing fortunes and war in the region. Sa Shan, who was born in Beijing, has lived in France since 1990. This is her first novel to be translated into English. (CHN214, $13.95)
 
God Lives in St. Petersburg, and Other Stories  •  Tom Bissell
LITERATURE •  2006 •  PAPER  • 212 PAGES
Bissell (Chasing the Sea) returns to his years in Central Asia as a Peace Corps volunteer in these sharp, witty fictionalized accounts. His six fast-paced tales are set in Kazakhstan, Afghanistan and the Aral Sea. (CAS117, $13.95)
 
The Great Mirror of Male Love  •  Ihara Saikaku
LITERATURE •  1990 •  PAPER  • 384 PAGES
A fascinating glimpse in sexual practices of Tokugawa era Japan. From the creator of the "floating world" genre of Japanese prose. (JPN243, $26.95)
 
The Great Wave: Gilded Age Misfits, Japanese Eccentrics, and the Opening of Old Japan  •  Christopher Benfey
HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 352 PAGES
The fascinating tale of a group of late Victorian, mostly American travelers, scientists and adventurers dedicated to the idea of Japan. The group, noted for wealth and influence, included Lafcadio Hearn, Isabella Stewart Gardner, Herman Melville, Henry Adams, Mabel Loomis Todd and President Roosevelt. This is the same group that touted Kakuzo Okakura's The Art of Tea to Boston society. (JPN138, $14.95)
  The Great Wave: Gilded Age Misfits, Japanese Eccentrics, and the Opening of Old Japan
The Harsh Cry of the Heron  •  Lian Hearn
MYSTERY •  2007 •  PAPER  • 576 PAGES
The surprise fourth installment, the epic conclusion of Lian Hearn's beloved, bestselling Tales of the Otori. (JPN249, $15.00)
  The Harsh Cry of the Heron
Haruko's World, A Japanese Farm Woman and Her Community  •  Gail Lee Bernstein
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1985 •  PAPER  • 199 PAGES
A portrait of everyday life in contemporary rural Japan. The author six-month stayed with Haruko and her family in 1974-75. With photographs. Haruko emerges as a complex, lively character, far removed from the usual stereotypes. (JPN150, $23.95)
 
The Heritage of Japanese Civilization  •  Albert M. Craig
HISTORY •  2002 •  PAPER  • 173 PAGES
An accessible short history of Japanese history and culture from prehistoric times to the end of the 20th century, written for an undergraduate audience. With black-and-white illustrations and maps throughout. (JPN174, $43.40)
 
Herons and Egrets of the World, A Photographic Journey  •  James Hancock
NATURAL HISTORY •  1999 •  PAPER  • 208 PAGES
A photographic survey of all 47 species and subspecies of herons by a lifelong advocate. With range maps, large color photographs and detailed descriptions. (BRD09, $29.95)
 
Hired Swords, The Rise of Private Warrior Power in Early Japan  •  Karl F. Friday
HISTORY •  1996 •  PAPER  • 265 PAGES
A scholarly history of court-warrior relationships and the rise of Japanese military institutions from the 7th to mid-12th centuries. With illustrations of Illustrations of the armor, weapons and other military accouterments. (JPN146, $26.95)
 
Hiroshima Traces, Time, Space, and the Dialectics of Memory  •  Lisa Yoneyama
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1999 •  PAPER  • 301 PAGES
A unique examination of the Hiroshima tragedy and its legacy as told through first hand accounts and period texts. (JPN239, $25.95)
 
The History of Gardens  •  Christopher Thacker
NATURAL HISTORY •  1985 •  PAPER
A standard world history of gardens, well illustrated and wide-ranging, covering everything from Zen gardens in Japan to English country gardens. (GRD09, $41.95)
 
A History of Japan  •  Conrad D. Totman
HISTORY •  2005 •  PAPER  • 684 PAGES
A revised edition of Totman's authoritative history of Japan from c.8000 BC to the present day, geared for undergraduates. (JPN199, $50.95)
  A History of Japan
A History of Japan, From Stone Age to Superpower  •  Kenneth G. Henshall
HISTORY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 235 PAGES
A brief, accessible survey of the transformation of Japan, its people and economy, from feudal society to economic powerhouse. (JPN133, $21.95)
 
Hitching Rides With Buddha  •  Will Ferguson
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2006 •  PAPER  • 304 PAGES
As irreverent as ever, Will Ferguson tracks cherry blossoms from Kagoshima to Rishiri Island in this rollicking report from the cultural frontlines in Japan. Fall foliage is nothing compared to the mania experienced in Japan over Cherry Blossom Viewing. It's got it's own name (hanami) and it is, among other things, a good excuse to loiter (in parks, temples, cemeteries) and get roaring drunk. Ferguson spent five years living in Japan. (JPN188, $14.00)
  Hitching Rides With Buddha
The Illustrated Book of Five Rings  •  Miyamoto Musashi  •  Thomas Cleary
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2006 •  HARD COVER  • 192 PAGES
The original account of samurai philosophies and warfare by the undefeated swordsman and samurai Miyamoto Musashi, originally published in 1643. (JPN206, $24.95)
 
In the Ring of Fire, A Pacific Basin Journey  •  James Houston
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1997 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
A lyrical narrative of the author's journeys through Japan, Indonesia, Micronesia, Hawaii and California. From contemplating the Kilauea crater to watching a Ryukyuan dance at an Okinawa community center, Houston reveals the pan-Pacific identity that has emerged from the mixing of Eastern and Western cultures. From the author of "Farewell to Manzanar." (PAC45, $14.95)
 
Insight Guide East Asia: China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan  •  Insight Guides
GUIDEBOOK •  2001 •  PAPER  • 412 PAGES
An illustrated guide to the history, culture and traditions of China, Taiwan, Korea and Japan featuring 250 color photographs and 16 maps. (ASA27, $24.95)
  Insight Guide East Asia: China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan
Insight Guide Japan  •  Insight Guides
GUIDEBOOK •  2007 •  PAPER  • 395 PAGES
A comprehensive, illustrated guide to the culture, history and attractions of Japan for the traveler, featuring excellent full color maps. It includes sections on arts and crafts, performing arts, etiquette, and other topics of interest. Half the book is devoted to a survey of attractions throughout the archipelago. (JPN74, $23.95)
  Insight Guide Japan
Introduction to Japanese Architecture  •  Michiko Kimura Young  •  David Young
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  2003 •  HARD COVER  • 128 PAGES
A brief overview of Japanese architecture from early settlement through the 20th-century. The authors consider Buddhist and local influences, the impact of the shogunates and Western influences. With 270 watercolors and color photographers. (JPN171, $34.95)
  Introduction to Japanese Architecture
Japan and Its World, Two Centuries of Change  •  Marius Jansen
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1995 •  PAPER  • 150 PAGES
Jansen distills a lifetime of scholarship in this elegant meditation on ideas the Japanese have had of themselves, the United States, and the Western world, originally delivered as a lecture series in 1975. (JPN221, $25.95)
 
Japan Atlas, A Bilingual Guide  •  Kodansha International
GUIDEBOOK •  2006 •  PAPER  • 128 PAGES
This newly revised, one-of-a-kind guide features large-scale regional maps, as well as maps of major cities, tourist areas, transportation, national parks and historic spots. Kodansha's guide is the only atlas that includes place-names in English and Japanese on all 68 maps. (JPN208, $24.00)
 
The Japan Journals, 1947-2004  •  Donald Richie  •  Leza Lowitz
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2005 •  PAPER  • 440 PAGES
A well-edited collection of journal excerpts from the eminent film historian and observer of Japan. With 75 black-and-white photographs. (JPN141, $29.95)
  The Japan Journals, 1947-2004
Japan, A Reinterpretation  •  Patrick Smith
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1998 •  PAPER  • 400 PAGES
Informed by the author's experience as a journalist in Asia and wide-ranging research, this provocative book tears down the image of Japan as a nation of conservative workaholics. It's a thoughtful, stimulating look at the country since World War II, targeting the role of the U.S. in creating modern Japan. Highly recommended. (JPN16, $15.95)
  Japan, A Reinterpretation
Japan, A Short Cultural History  •  George A. Sansom
HISTORY •  1978 •  PAPER  • 548 PAGES
A classic overview of Japanese culture and history, originally published in 1931. Sansom was professor of Japanese studies and Director of the East Asian Institute (1947-1953) at Columbia University. (JPN151, $36.95)
 
Japan, Its History and Culture  •  W. Scott Morton
HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 311 PAGES
A concise survey of Japanese history, people and culture from ancient origins to contemporary society. With selections from Japanese literature and arts, anecdotes and illustrations. Aimed at the college student, the book is also appropriate for the traveler. Morton keeps a tight focus on the character and personality of Japan as it evolved over the centuries. (JPN03, $18.95)
  Japan, Its History and Culture
Japan/Korea Political Wall Map  •  National Geographic
1995 •  MAP
A National Geograpic wall map showing Japan and Korea at a scale of 1:3,500,000. 30" x 24". Price includes separate shipping in a sturdy cardboard tube. (JPN122, $14.99)
 
Japan: Why It Works, Why It Doesn't  •  James Mak  •  Shigeyuki Abe  •  Kazuhiro Igawa  •  Shyam Sunder
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1997 •  PAPER  • 219 PAGES
Organized as a series of 26 short essays, this social and economic history of Japan is of equal interest to students and travelers. It's a lively look at the everyday economics of the Japanese. Witih chapters on marriage, gifts, pachinko, brand-name goods, small shops, vending machines, hiring practices, banking, television and other topics. (JPN153, $20.00)
  Japan: Why It Works, Why It Doesn't
Japanese Beyond Words, How to Walk and Talk Like a Native Speaker  •  Andrew Horvat
GUIDEBOOK •  2000 •  PAPER  • 176 PAGES • COMING IN
A long time resident of Tokyo, Horvat explains how to dress, walk, talk, slurp, and bow your way to cultural fluency in Japanese. He covers the sometimes confounding etiquette of shoes, doors, politeness, dress, business cards and other keys to getting along in Japan. (JPN194, $14.95)
  Japanese Beyond Words, How to Walk and Talk Like a Native Speaker
Japanese Buddhism, A Cultural History  •  Yoshiro Tamura
RELIGION •  2001 •  PAPER  • 232 PAGES
A succinct history of Buddhism as it interacts with Japanese culture. From one of Japan's leading scholars of Buddhism. (JPN237, $14.95)
  Japanese Buddhism, A Cultural History
Japanese Castles 1540-1640  •  Stephen Turnbull
HISTORY •  2003 •  PAPER  • 64 PAGES
The landscape of 16th- and 17th-century Japan was dominated by the graceful and imposing castles constructed by the powerful ‘daimyo' of the period. In this the most turbulent era in Japanese history, these militarily sophisticated structures provided strongholds for the consolidation and control of territory, and inevitably they became the focus for many of the great sieges of Japanese history: Nagashino (1575), Kitanosho (1583), Odawara (1590), Fushimi (1600), Osaka (1615) and Hara (1638), the last of the battles that brought an end to a period of intense civil war. This title traces their development from the earliest timber stockades to the immense structures that dominated the great centers of Osaka and Edo. (JPN247, $18.95)
 
Japanese Discovery of Europe, 1720-1830  •  Donald Keene
HISTORY •  1969 •  PAPER  • 272 PAGES
A classic overview of Japanese perceptions of the West before the arrival of Commander Perry by the marvelous scholar of Japanese literature, originally published in 1952. This revised edition includes two chapters covering 1798 to 1830. The book is an schorarly but nicely written study of Japanese and Western interactions, much of which involved the Dutch presence in Nagasaki. Keene focuses in particular on the work of Honda Toshiaki, an intriguing writer of the late Edo period. (JPN152, $21.95)
 
Japanese Foreign Policy at the Crossroads, Challenges and Options for the Twenty-First Century  •  Yutaka Kawashima
HISTORY •  2003 •  HARD COVER  • 162 PAGES
A though-provoking analysis by the man who was Japan's vice minister of foreign affairs from 1999 to 2001. Kawashima, who argues for international co-operation, has been ambassador to Israel, visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution and teacher at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government. (JPN132, $32.95)
 
Japanese Garden Design  •  Marc P. Keane  •  Haruzo Ohashi
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  2004 •  PAPER  • 184 PAGES
An illustrated introduction to the aesthetics and meanings of Japanese gardens. It relates the social, religious and historical contexts to landscape and garden design. With chapters on the origins of the Japanese garden, gardens of Heian aristocrats, gardens of Zen Buddhism, tea gardens, Tsuba gardens and Edo stroll gardens. The author is a landscape architect and garden designer living in Japan. (JPN52, $30.00)
  Japanese Garden Design
Japanese Inn  •  Oliver Statler
LITERATURE •  1982 •  PAPER  • 365 PAGES
Set at a Japanese inn along the road from Kyoto, this partly fictional account evokes life through four generations -- an impressionistic overview of traditional Japan solidly based on actual historic events. Inspired by the author's discovery of Minaguchi-ya and its proprietors during his stint as a civil servant during the American occupation of Japan, the inn and its proprietors are real even if much of the history was reconstructed and invented. It's a gracefully told, engaging story. Illustrated with 50 Japanese prints. (JPN39, $22.00)
  Japanese Inn
The Japanese Today, Continuity and Change  •  Edwin O. Reischauer  •  Marius Jansen
HISTORY •  1995 •  PAPER  • 459 PAGES
A classic survey of Japanese culture and society by the infulential Harvard professor Edwin O. Reischauer, first published in 1977 and revised for this edition by Marius Jansen. (JPN83, $25.00)
  The Japanese Today, Continuity and Change
Japanese Touch for Your Garden  •  Kiyoshi Seike  •  Masanobu Kudo  •  Haruzo Ohashi
GUIDEBOOK •  1993 •  PAPER  • 80 PAGES
A color guide to creating a Japanese garden with step-by-step instructions on design and planting, suggested garden plans and notes on plant care. It's well illustrated with color photographs of well known gardens of Japan. (JPN172, $25.00)
 
Japanese, A Language Map  •  Kristine K. Kershul
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  2001 •  PLASTIC CARD
This durable, foldout card, featuring 1,000 words and phrases, works as a quick reference for travelers. (JPN177, $7.95)
 
Japanese, Start Speaking Today  •  Language/30
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  1992 •  AUDIO CD
A 90-minute crash course in Japanese, featured on compact disc with a phrasebook. (JPN224, $21.95)
 
Kyoto, Seven Paths to the Heart of the City  •  Diana Durston  •  Katsuhiko Mizuno
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2002 •  PAPER  • 68 PAGES
An oversize, nicely illustrated walking guide to seven historic districts, which includes 100 color photographs and 8 very helpful full-color maps. Durston (who also wrote the excellent Old Kyoto) augments the neighborhood descriptions with notes on architecture, food, crafts and festivals. (JPN119, $24.95)
 
The Lady and the Monk, Four Seasons in Kyoto  •  Pico Iyer
LITERATURE •  1992 •  PAPER  • 337 PAGES
Deeply romanticized, this short novel is nonetheless redolent in the places, sights and sounds of modern day Kyoto. Iyer writes with infectious charm the story of a young American man and his affair with a bored Japanese married woman. (JPN32, $14.95)
  The Lady and the Monk, Four Seasons in Kyoto
The Last Shogun, The Life of Tokugawa Yoshinobu  •  Ryotaro Shiba
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2004 •  PAPER  • 264 PAGES
The story of the 15th and last Tokugawa shogun, who launched a massive project of modernization that would foreshadow the Meiji Restoration. (JPN238, $14.00)
 
A Lateral View, Essays on Culture and Style in Contemporary Japan  •  Donald Richie
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1992 •  PAPER  • 245 PAGES
An insightful, wide-ranging collection of essays on the arts, society and culture of modern Japan by the reigning dean of critics (JPN01, $14.95)
 
Learning to Bow, Inside the Heart of Japan  •  Bruce Feiler
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2004 •  PAPER  • 321 PAGES
As surprising, helpful and informative as it is funny, this is an insightful account of travels and teaching in Japan. Feiler presents the rituals, personality traits and cultural peccadilloes of the Japanese through anecdote, often making fun of himself in the process. Highly recommended. First published in 1991. (JPN111, $13.95)
  Learning to Bow, Inside the Heart of Japan
Letters to Henrietta  •  Lisa Chubbuck  •  Isabella Bird
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2003 •  PAPER  • 356 PAGES
This eye-opening collection of letters back home, nicely selected by Lisa Chubbuck with an intrridction and notes, reveals the tenacity, self-promotion and verve of the Victorian maiden aunt of modern travel writers. An unlikely candidate for adventure, Bird's ill health propelled her to the Colorado Rockies, Hawaii, China, and Japan -- and into the confidence of Queen Victoria, the King of Hawaii, and William Gladstone. She also carried on with a one-eyed trapper and fended off many other more suitable suitors. That's quite a transformation for a middle-aged spinster from the Isle of Mull. Travel does a person good. With 32 illustrations, maps, notes, and bibliography. In two parts: The first world tour, 1872-3 (the sea Australia, Hawaii, Colorado); The second world tour, 1878-9 (Japan and the way thither, China, Malay Peninsula). (WLD39, $22.95)
 
Life of an Amorous Woman and Other Writings  •  Ihara Saikaku
LITERATURE •  1969 •  PAPER  • 403 PAGES
A collection of fiction from the pioneering 17th century Japanese writer. (JPN245, $16.95)
 
Life of Jesus  •  Shusaku Endo
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1989 •  PAPER
An extended essay on Jesus by the 20th-century Japanese novelist, a Roman Catholic whose many works explore chistianity and morals. (JPN156, $11.95)
 
Light Verse from the Floating World  •  Makoto Ueda
LITERATURE •  1999 •  PAPER  • 273 PAGES
An anthology of 400 seventeen-syllable verse poems, divided into ten sections, each introduced by Makoto Ueda. The comic poems poke fun at the ruling and warrior classes, foibles and habits of townsfolk, and other aspects of the human condition of Edo Japan (where adultery was apparently common place). (JPN86, $25.00)
  Light Verse from the Floating World
Liquid Jade, The Story of Tea from Wast to West  •  Beatrice Hohenegger
HISTORY •  2006 •  HARD COVER  • 256 PAGES
Hohenegger takes in the history, as well as the spiritual, cultural and economic importance of tea in this captivating tale of politics and intrigue. (ASA54, $24.95)
 
Lonely Planet Kyoto  •  Lonely Planet
GUIDEBOOK •  2008 •  PAPER  • 220 PAGES
A practical travel guide to Kyoto, covering history and culture, as well as its many temples, gardens and other attractions. With detailed day trips, travel information and 32 pages of maps, this is an excellent guide to Kyoto. (JPN60, $22.99)
  Lonely Planet Kyoto
Lonely Planet Tokyo  •  Lonely Planet
GUIDEBOOK •  2008 •  PAPER  • 264 PAGES
A compact, practical guide in the hallmark Lonely Planet style with a helpful section of 32 color maps (JPN100, $19.99)
  Lonely Planet Tokyo
Lost Japan  •  Alex Kerr
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1996 •  PAPER  • 269 PAGES
Originally appearing as a series of 15 articles in a Japanese magazine, long-time resident Kerr offers an account of the Japan that he knew as a child. It's a wistful account of traditional culture and change in contemporary Japan, combining travelogue, memoir, and journalism. (JPN36, $10.95)
  Lost Japan
The Lost Wolves of Japan  •  Brett L. Walker
NATURAL HISTORY •  2005 •  HARD COVER
Drawing on Japanese history, literature, folklore and biology, Walker looks at the forces that caused the extinction of the wolves in Japan. It's a tale of the loss of habitat and changed attitudes toward nature. Walker is also the author of The Conquest of Ainu Lands: Ecology and Culture in Japanese Expansion,1590-1800. A volume in the excellent Weyerhaeuser Environmental series, chosen and with a forward by William Cronon. (JPN215, $35.00)
 
The Making of Modern Japan  •  Marius Jansen
HISTORY •  2002 •  PAPER  • 871 PAGES
An epic account of Japan and its transformation from feudal society to modern superpower from 1600 to the present. Well worth the effort for the traveler interested in history (JPN88, $24.50)
 
The Makioka Sisters  •  Tanizaki Junichiro
LITERATURE •  1995 •  PAPER  • 530 PAGES
The story of a merchant family in prewar Osaka and the strugggle of four beautiful sisters to maintain their position in society after the death of their parents, also made into a delightful film by Ichikawa. Janichiro evokes old Osaka and the relationship amonghte sisters in rich detail. (JPN41, $15.95)
  The Makioka Sisters
Memoirs of a Geisha  •  Arthur Golden
LITERATURE •  2005 •  LARGE PRINT
A large print edition of the runaway best-selling novel about a geisha in the celebrated Gion district of Kyoto. A major feat of literary impersonation, the Golden's novel is rich in period detail and ceremony. (JPN217, $28.95)
 
Memoirs of a Geisha  •  Arthur Golden
LITERATURE •  2005 •  AUDIO CD
An audio-book edition of the runaway best-selling novel about a geisha in the celebrated Gion district of Kyoto. A major feat of literary impersonation, the Golden's novel is rich in period detail and ceremony. As read by Elaina Erika Davis. (JPN218, $24.95)
 
Memoirs of a Geisha, A Novel  •  Arthur Golden
LITERATURE •  1999 •  PAPER  • 434 PAGES
The runaway bestseller by a middle-aged white academic who, in this lyrical first novel, effectively impersonates Sayuri, a formidable geisha in the celebrated Gion district of Kyoto in the years before WWII. A major feat of literary impersonation, the novel is rich in period detail and ceremony. Sayuri's rise from humble rural beginnings to practically goddess-hood is all the more poignant because of the contrast with her not-so-pretty or talented sister, also sold into servitude, who becomes instead a prostitute in a bad part of town. (JPN45, $14.95)
  Memoirs of a Geisha, A Novel
Midway, The Battle that Doomed Japan  •  Mitsuo Fuchida
HISTORY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
A groundbreaking first-person account of the Battle of Midway told from the Japanese perspective. Fuchida's military history is well researched as he details the events leading from Pearl Harbor to Japan's defeat at Midway. Both an outstanding piece of historical writing and a compelling personal account. (HWI58, $19.95)
 
Modern Japanese Literature  •  Donald Keene
ANTHOLOGY •  1989 •  PAPER  • 448 PAGES
A popular sampling of Japanese literature from mid-19th century to the mid-20th. This volume follows "Anthology of Japanese Literature from the Earliest Era to the Mid-Nineteenth Century" (JPN12). (JPN72, $15.95)
 
Musashi, An Epic Novel of the Samurai Era  •  Eiji Yoshikawa  •  Charles S. Terry
LITERATURE •  1995 •  HARD COVER  • 984 PAGES
The classic samurai novel about the exploits of Miyamoto Musashi, Japan's famous swordsman and folk hero. Set in 17th-century Japan, it's a rousing, historical novel full of incident. Originally published in serialized form in the Asahi Shimbun before WWII. Musashi's The Book of Five Rings is widely read. A number of Yoshikawa's popular historical novels have been translated into English. (JPN168, $35.00)
 
The Narrow Road to Oku  •  Basho Matsuo  •  Masayuki Miyata  •  Donald Keene
LITERATURE •  1997 •  PAPER  • 188 PAGES • FAMILY
Keene gives a precise and poetic translation, alongside the original Japanese characters, in this edition of Basho's (1644-1694) famous journey to Oku. The edition is further enhanced by the beautiful and whimsical artwork of Masayuki Miyata. (JPN211, $25.00)
 
Narrow Road to the Deep North and Other Travel Sketches  •  Nobuyuki Yuasa  •  Basho Matsuo
LITERATURE •  1967 •  PAPER  • 178 PAGES
These marvelous prose-and-poetry sketches by the famous poet wanderer Basho (1644-94) invoke the mysteries of the cosmos manifest in the Japanese landscape. The haiku included are acknowledged some of the best ever composed. He concludes his masterpiece with: "In this little book of travel is included everything under the sky -- not only that which is hoary and dry but also that which is young and colorful, not only that which is strong and imposing but also that which is feeble and ephemeral." (JPN91, $13.00)
  Narrow Road to the Deep North and Other Travel Sketches
National Geographic Expedition Journal  •  National Geographic
JOURNAL •  2000 •  HARD COVER  • 192 PAGES
A deluxe leather-bound travel journal featuring heavyweight blank paper and 90 vintage photographs from the National Geographic archives. (GEN157, $24.00)
  National Geographic Expedition Journal
National Geographic Traveler Japan  •  Nicholas Bornoff
GUIDEBOOK •  2008 •  PAPER  • 400 PAGES
This guide to Japan, published in the National Geographic attractive visual style, features hundreds of photographs, full color maps, and good information on history, nature, culture and travel in Japan. (JPN120, $27.95)
  National Geographic Traveler Japan
Noguchi East and West  •  Dore Ashton
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1993 •  PAPER  • 331 PAGES
A biography of the California-born sculptor and multimedia artist Noguchi, written by a pre-eminent historian of 20th-century art. Dore Ashton makes sense of Noguchi's many periods and influences, considering both his Japanese and American inheritances. (ART16, $25.95)
 
The Other Japan, Voices Beyond the Mainstream  •  David Suzuki  •  Keibo Oiwa
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1999 •  PAPER  • 336 PAGES
For this collection of voices, Suzuki -- a Canadian environmentalist of Japanese descent -- interviewed reformers, minorities, radicals, environmentalists, human rights activists and others outside the Japanese mainstream. He collaborated with Oiwa, an anthropologist who has worked among minority and aboriginal groups in Japan. (JPN128, $18.95)
 
Our Land Was a Forest, An Ainu Memoir  •  Kayano Shingeru
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1994 •  PAPER  • 172 PAGES
This lovely memoir of life on Hokkaido in the years following WWII is also an account of the disappearing traditions of the Ainu people in the face of a modernizing nation. (JPN46, $34.00)
 
Out  •  Natsuo Kirino
MYSTERY •  2005 •  PAPER
In this well-received mystery, Masako Katori, a middle-aged wife and mother working the night shift at a Tokyo factory, strangles her abusive husband. (JPN196, $13.95)
  Out
Perfectly Japanese, Making Families in an Era of Upheaval  •  Merry Isaacs White
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2002 •  PAPER  • 265 PAGES
An anthropological analysis of the changing nature and structure of the family in Japan over the past 100 years. Merry Isaacs White is Professor of Anthropology at Boston University. She demolishes the notion of the Japanses family as any one thing but shows the institution in its many forms over time. (JPN169, $22.95)
 
The Perfumed Sleeve  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  2005 •  PAPER
(JPN226, $6.99)
 
The Pillow Book of Lady Wisteria  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  2003 •  PAPER
(JPN228, $6.99)
 
Pimsleur Quick & Simple Japanese  •  Pimsleur Language Method
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  2005 •  AUDIO CD
Four audio CDs with eight 30-minute lessons in basic Japanese, covering elementary vocabulary and phrases used in travel and everyday situations. The Pimsleur method emphasizes the use of listening skills without reading materials (so there isn't a book to follow along). It's advertised as "Totally audio: hear it, learn it, speak it." (JPN175, $19.95)
  Pimsleur Quick & Simple Japanese
The Rarest of the Rare, Vanishing Animals, Timeless Worlds  •  Diane Ackerman
NATURAL HISTORY •  1996 •  PAPER  • 208 PAGES
This collection of six essays includes Ackerman's insightful commentary on the migrations of the monarch butterfly, as well as wonderfully written chapters on the Golden Tamarin, Hawaiian monk seal and other animals. The second collection by this wonderful writer and reporter, Ackerman once again artfully interweaves travel and natural history to capture the spirit of endangered places and animals and those who would preserve them. (BST26, $12.95)
  The Rarest of the Rare, Vanishing Animals, Timeless Worlds
Rashomon Gate  •  I. J. Parker
MYSTERY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 368 PAGES
This installment in the popular series set in eleventh-century Japan takes detective Sugawara Akitada to the Imperial University in Heian Kyo, which is now Kyoto. (JPN203, $14.00)
  Rashomon Gate
Read Japanese Today  •  Len Walsh
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  1969 •  PAPER  • 160 PAGES
A classic guide to understanding and deciphering the basic meaning of 300 of the most common and useful characters in written Japanese. The author focuses on the pictographs from which the characters are derived. (JPN110, $14.95)
  Read Japanese Today
Red Chrysanthemum  •  Laura Joh Rowland
LITERATURE •  2006 •  HARD COVER  • 288 PAGES
In the 11th title in Rowland's series of page-turners set in 17th century Japan, samurai Sano Ichiro searches for the murderer of his pregnant wife. Rich in drama, atmosphere and historical detail. (JPN220, $24.95)
 
Religion in Contemporary Japan  •  Ian Reader
RELIGION •  1991 •  PAPER  • 294 PAGES
This collection of case studies, a popular university text, illuminates the influence and practice of religion in contemporary Japanese society. An ethnographer with an interest in religion, Reader spent several years living and teaching in Japan. He draws together interviews from many participants at Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines, festivals and other events with religious significance. (JPN127, $19.00)
 
Religions of Japan in Practice  •  George J. Tanabe, Jr.
RELIGION •  1999 •  PAPER  • 550 PAGES
A well-chosen collection of 45 essays and original religious texts, including selections on prayer, ritual, routines and dieties. It is a scholarly overview of the culture and religion of Japan, organized thematically and accessible to the general reader. (JPN162, $37.50)
 
The Rising Sun: The Decline and Fall of the Japanese Empire, 1936-1945  •  John Toland
HISTORY •  2003 •  PAPER  • 976 PAGES
A rich and readable history of Japanese militarism from the intricacies of Tokyo politics in the 1930s to riveting WWII Pacific battles. Expertly researched, Toland provides a good deal of fresh information. (JPN223, $21.95)
 
The Rising Tide, A Novel of the Second World War  •  Jeff Shaara
LITERATURE •  2006 •  HARD COVER  • 672 PAGES
From the author of Gods and Generals and the son of Michael Shaara, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Killer Angels, comes this piece of historical fiction set during World War II in the Pacific, North Africa and throughout Europe, whose main characters are Hitler, Mussolini, Eisenhower and Churchill. (EUR235, $27.95)
  The Rising Tide, A Novel of the Second World War
The River Ki  •  Sawako Ariyoshi
LITERATURE •  1982 •  PAPER  • 248 PAGES
Originally published in 1959, this novel chronicles the lives of its main character, Hana, her daughter and granddaughter in a village along the River Ki. Ariyoshi, a popular modern writer who died in 1984, illuminates traditional life -- and change -- in Japan in the years before World War II. (JPN126, $16.00)
  The River Ki
The Roads to Sata, a 2000-Mile Walk Through Japan  •  Alan Booth
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1997 •  PAPER  • 281 PAGES
A revealing, humorous account of the author's 2,000-mile walk north to south from Hokkaido to Kyushu by a wonderfully eccentric British expatriate. Booth is a disarming writer, chronicling his encounters along the byways of rural Japan with farmers, misfits, tramps and others who crossed his path. By the author of "Looking for the Lost." (JPN11, $16.00)
  The Roads to Sata, a 2000-Mile Walk Through Japan
Rough Guide Japan  •  Rough Guide
GUIDEBOOK •  2008 •  PAPER  • 1078 PAGES
This sturdy comprehensive guide in the British series nicely balances a historical and cultural overview with practical travel information. (JPN166, $28.99)
  Rough Guide Japan
Rough Guide Music Japan  •  Various Artists
MUSIC •  1999 •  AUDIO CD
A carefully chosen sampling of the diverse sounds of Japan, featuring such indigenous instruments as the stringed koto, the shakuhachi flute, and tako drums. (JPN216, $14.95)
 
Ruins of Identity, Ethnogenesis in the Japanese Islands  •  Mark Hudson
ARCHAEOLOGY •  1999 •  PAPER  • 323 PAGES
Hudson considers race, culture and national identity in this comprehensive scholarly account of the origins of the Japanese people. Winner of the John Whitney Hall Prize (Association for Asian Studies). (JPN198, $25.00)
 
Sacred Texts and Buried Treasures, Issues in the Historical Archaeology of Ancient Japan  •  William Wayne Farris
ARCHAEOLOGY •  1998 •  PAPER  • 333 PAGES
A collection of scholarly writing on archaeology in Japan. (JPN195, $36.00)
 
The Samurai  •  Shusaku Endo
LITERATURE •  1997 •  PAPER  • 272 PAGES
This historical novel by one of Japan's best-known modern writers is set in the world of the 17th-century Samurai. Endo, a Roman Catholic, explored Christianity and morals in his many novels and stories. (JPN157, $14.95)
  The Samurai
The Samurai's Garden  •  Gail Tsukiyama
LITERATURE •  1996 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
Tsukiyama sets her poignant tale of a young Chinese man coming-of-age in a rural Japanese village in the momentous days just before WWII erupts. (JPN173, $13.95)
  The Samurai's Garden
The Samurai's Wife  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  2001 •  PAPER
(JPN230, $6.99)
 
Samurai, The World of the Warrior  •  Stephen Turnbull
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2003 •  HARD COVER  • 224 PAGES
A handsomely illustrated overview of the warrior elite of early Japan, their traditions, history and legacy, by a leading authority. (JPN147, $29.95)
  Samurai, The World of the Warrior
The Sea and the Poison  •  Shusaku Endo
LITERATURE •  1992 •  PAPER  • 167 PAGES
One of many novels by the 20th-century Japanese writer, a Roman Catholic whose many works explore chistianity and morals. This one set in Tokyo during WWII. (JPN161, $12.95)
 
Seabirds of the World, A Photographic Guide  •  Peter Harrison
FIELD GUIDE •  1996 •  PAPER  • 317 PAGES • COMING IN
A field edition of Harrison's definitive seabird identification guide, featuring 740 color photographs. It illustrates all the world's seabirds, many in a variety of plumages. The book also contains a convenient key to identifying the confusing albatrosses, petrels and other tubenoses, as well as range maps and information about habitats and distribution. This is the book that you'd carry on any sea voyage; our ten-year-old edition has been everywhere. (FG16, $29.95)
  Seabirds of the World, A Photographic Guide
Secret Teachings in the Art of Japanese Gardens  •  David A. Slawson
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1991 •  PAPER
A meditation and manual on the art of Japanese garden design. (JPN165, $30.00)
 
The Secrets of Mariko, A Year in the Life of a Japanese Woman and Her Family  •  Elisabeth Bumiller
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1996 •  PAPER  • 368 PAGES
Bumiller, a Washington Post journalist, sketches the daily routines and challenges in the life of a contemporary Japanese family. She interviewed the family, and especially Mrs. Tanaka over the course of a year for this lively, nuanced portrait. (JPN142, $14.95)
 
Shadow Shoguns: The Rise and Fall of Japan's Postwar Political Machine  •  Jacob M. Schlesinger
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1999 •  PAPER  • 320 PAGES
The Tokyo correspondent for the Wall Steeet Journal, dissects the political character of modern Japan. At the center of the story is Kakuei Tanaka, the populist political boss who built a political machine that dominated the long ruling Liberal Democratic Party from the 1970's to the 1990's. (JPN37, $26.95)
 
Shibori, The Inventive Art of Japanese Shaped Resist Dyeing Tradition Techniques Innovation  •  Yoshiko Wada
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1999 •  PAPER  • 303 PAGES
This oversize, heavily illustrated book introduces the traditions, practice and techniques of the Japanese art of tie-dye. Of equal interest to both the practitioner and visitor with a serious interest in textile arts. (JPN78, $48.00)
 
Shinju  •  Laura Joh Rowland
MYSTERY •  1996 •  PAPER
(JPN233, $7.99)
 
Shogun  •  James Clavell
LITERATURE •  1976 •  PAPER  • 1152 PAGES
Clavell's immensely popular story of an English traveler and his encounters with a Japanese warlord and a beautiful woman in 17th century Japan. While it is a long book, it is also a rousing modern epic, full of adventure and emotion. (JPN47, $7.99)
  Shogun
Silence  •  Shusaku Endo
LITERATURE •  1980 •  PAPER
The best known work by the 20th-century Japanese novelist, about the 17th-century martyrdom of a young Portuguese missionary in Japan. (JPN155, $11.95)<