Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

The Half Known Life: In Search of Paradise by Pico Iyer

The Half Known Life is a slim book with so much between its covers. In some respects it is a travelogue and in others a look into the theology and philosophy that men seek to understand. Iyer was born in Oxford England and has lived in San Francisco and Japan. This book recounts his travels to Iran, North Korea, Northern Ireland, Kashmir, and Sri Lanka. He seeks to discover what Paradise means to the inhabitants of those places in addition to himself.


Central to the book is Iyer's relationship to the Dalai Lama with whom he has been friends for over 40 years. As he has traveled the world with the Dalai Lama, he has become accustomed to the people who search out paradise here on Earth and beyond. In response to that, however, the answer lies more in the experiences on Earth rather than theoretical explanations of eternal life.

Traveling from place to place is illustrative of the human condition where people struggle for a meaningful existence, especially in the midst of chaos and violence. Although Iyer is not a Buddhist, he tends to look at the calmness that is central to that religion and suggests that a reliance on it will provide a quiet that leads to introspection.


He comes to the conclusion "I decided that I would no longer seek out holy places in [a] city of temples I would just let life come to me in all its happy confusion and find the holiness in that.”

Iyers conveys a sense of peace, wanderlust and even some strife as he travels to all the places. It was a book that I probably would not have picked up except that he will be speaking on 29 September 2024. I am anxious to hear him. I do wish that there had been a map within the book that detailed his journeys. 

Pittsburgh Arts and Lectures - 30 September 2024


Pittsburgh Arts and Lectures - 30 September 2024





 

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Before the Coffee Gets Cold by Toshikazu Kawaguchi


 This was the selection for our March book club gathering. It is the first in a series of books that takes place in a small cafe, Funiculi, Funicula in Tokyo. The book is really a series of vignettes from the action that takes place in the cafe. They could be classified as time travel in that when a person sits in a particular chair at the cafe, they can travel into the past and become a part of that past, without being able to change it. 

A ghost, a woman dressed in white, is the usual occupant of the seat. However, once a day she leaves the seat to use the restroom in the cafe. It is at that time a person can take that seat and travel back in time. The stipulation is that the person must finish his or her visit to the past Before the Coffee Gets Cold.  The central character i s Kazu, the barister with other characters entering and exiting the cafe and the novel. 

The first story opens with Fumiko and  Goro, her boyfriend, enjoying coffee in the cafe. Much to her surprise and dismay Goro has decided to move to America. She doesn't speak up and convey her feelings and for this she regrets that time. This causes her to return to the cafe after a week to try to travel back in time to see what would have happened if she had expressed her love to Goro. She realizes that it wouldn't change things, but it would spur him on to possibly return at some point to Japan.

The second story is that of Kohtake who is married to Fusagi, a man diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. The disease has progressed to the point where Fusagi doesn't remember her, but had intended to give her a letter 3 years previous. She decides to take the seat to travel back and read the letter that affects her deeply . 

In the third story Hira, who owns a bar near the cafe, who because of her personal decision to live her own life and not take over the operation of her parents' inn, desires to travel back to make amends with her sister, Kumi, who was killed in a car accident. Hira blames herself for the accident and makes a promise to Kumi that she does keep.

Finally, the fourth story, Kei, the wife of Nagare, who owns the cafe, is the sole person who desires to travel forward in time. Suffering from a medical condition that threatens her life and the baby she is carrying,  she wants to know what happens to both of them. She is able to meet her daughter, Miki, who is 15 years old. This story also offers a surprise for Fumiko from the first story. 

Once the premise of the book became clear, it was easier to understand. What made it tedious, however, were the Japanese names for the characters and how to keep them separate. It was actually quite sad to understand the regret of those characters for actions that they wished to change. Love and relationships often lead to actions and reactions of regret. The emotions that the novel evoked were what made the book seem less contrived and far-fetched.