The making of a bot

I made a twitter bot – an engine which tweets automatically generated lists, ideally in the style of the Makura no Soshi (the Pillow Book). https://twitter.com/ThePillowBot/status/1086262597576544257 I have a long informal history of programming, back to the days of BASIC, but I’ve not done any for probably a decade and much of the newer stylesContinueContinue reading “The making of a bot”

10 (more) books about Japan

I’m looking forward to reading Chris Harding’s new book on modern Japan, but in the meantime he’s been doing some promotion for it – including this piece in the Guardian on The Top 10 Books About Japan. I think I’d probably include maybe three of his list in my 10 favourites – I’m not sureContinueContinue reading “10 (more) books about Japan”

Entangled history 

There was a great example of entangled history on the latest episode of the History Of Japan podcast. It’s now well into its fifth hour on the Bakumatsu/Meiji Ishin, and things are beginning to hot up. According to the podcast, the end of the Civil War left the U.S. with a large amount of weaponry -ContinueContinue reading “Entangled history “

A Road Trip, of sorts

Donald Richie’s The Inland Sea is widely regarded as one of the classics of post-war writing on Japan. It’s the account of a trip Richie took, alone, across the various islands of the Seto Naikai, the inland sea of the title. It’s a bold book, idiosyncratic and opinionated (and unashamedly adult), unafraid to cast modern Japan andContinueContinue reading “A Road Trip, of sorts”

Did I mention the heat?

The Japanese summer is the sound of 1000 cicadas in unison, so loud it cannot possibly be just some insects; it’s vast numbers of dragon flies, sortying across the sky in twos and threes and fours. It’s the sweet, sick smell of the drains; it’s scurrying across from one patch of shade to another; theContinueContinue reading “Did I mention the heat?”

On the road

In the last teaching weeks before Easter I revisited some travel books on post-war Japan – in particular Alan Booth’s Roads To Sata, Lost Japan by Alex Kerr, & The Inland Sea by Donald Richie. It was quite enjoyable to reread some of the books which I read before I got really stuck into Japan as anContinueContinue reading “On the road”