- Home
- NON-FICTION
- Travel & Adventure
- A Beginner's Guide to Japan
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
Bloomsbury presents A Beginner's Guide to Japan by Pico Iyer, read by Sartaj Garewal.
Winner of the Edward Stanford Travel Memoir of the Year 2020
A playful and profound guidebook full of surprising, brief, incisive glimpses into Japanese culture
Pico Iyer has been living around Kyoto for more than thirty-two years, but he admits at the outset of this book that he sometimes feels he knows less now than when he arrived. In the constantly surprising pages that follow, he shows how an evening with Meryl Streep, a walk through a ghostly deer park, even a call to the local Apple service centre can open up his adopted home in fresh and invigorating ways.
Why does anime make sense in an animist culture? How might Oscar Wilde reveal a culture too often associated with conformity? How can Japanese friends in a typical neighbourhood turn every stereotype on its head? His provocations may infuriate you – may even infuriate himself – Iyer confesses in his opening salvo, but maybe it's only by setting its love hotels next to its baseball stadia, its wild fashions against its eighth-century values, that Japan can be made new again for both the first-time visitor and the jaded foreign resident.
Product details
| Published | 05 Sep 2019 |
|---|---|
| Format | Audiobook |
| Duration | 3 hours and 27 minutes |
| ISBN | 9781526617880 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Publishing |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
Both deep and witty ... Iyer makes a perfect cultural translator
Times Literary Supplement
-
Rarely in any writing on Japan is provocation so elegantly and surgically performed
Financial Times
-
A must-read … Iyer at once opens up a new avenue for those familiar with the country while stoking the curiosity of would-be visitors
Elle
-
Insightful and profound … Iyer can nail Japan with lyrical eloquence
Japan Times
-
[A] lovely pocket compendium of oddities and insights of Japanese life ... Provocative and elegant, Iyer's guide succeeds precisely because it doesn't attempt to be authoritative
Publisher's Weekly
-
With an elegant, understated manner, Iyer offers poignant reflections on his adopted country and its maddening contradictions and shifting parts ... Iyer's subtle observations reveal a great deal about what is beyond the surface of how some Westerners view the Japanese
Kirkus

























