Kyoto was my favorite place in Japan. All the history and modern conveniences but with less confusion and feeling of chaos than Tokyo. The temples there are beautiful, I remember them more than any others. Kinkakuji, Ryoanji, and the Fushimi Inari Shrine are the ones that stick out most. Our sensei was from Kyoto, so I suppose that helped us get more out of the city.
The bicycles on sidewalks are dangerous though, especially when it's raining and everyone has umbrellas.
A friend of mine that lives in your neck of the world just went to Kyoto on her trek here to see her family, she posted tons of pictures of the temples and Zen gardens. It looks very peaceful. She mentioned she was tempted to become a monk after visiting. She also posted a pic of the bullet train, that looks fun.
I also got a big kick out of Kyoto. It was the only city not bombed by the USAAF in WW2 because it was considered to be a cultural treasure.
The bullet train is only fun if you like comfy seats, leaving on time, travelling at 200 MPH, getting served delicious food and beer and everything being spotlessly clean. But if that isnt your scene well then you might not like it.
I hope you did not stalk those geishas for too long.
All this Japan talk is making me remember that when I was a kid, we had a whole quarter or something on Japan. We even had a fairly substantial textbook on the subject. It was fun, at least I think it was. But since we didn't study any other countries at that age, I'm really wondering how and why that came up. Was it some sort of rapprochement with Japan a couple of decades after WWII? Was it just that it was so exotic? I tried to answer my own question with Google, but failed.
Interesting. I never learned anything in public school about Japan, except about WWII.
Whatever I know, I've had to read about.
If anyone has any ideas about current mysteries set in Japan, of course with an English translation, let us know. That's one way to learn about the culture.
I kept running into them actually. I would go down a side street and get lost and have to double back and run into them again. And they were walking so slowly because they were wearing clogs.
Yeah high school used to teach modules didnt they? Not sure if they do that anymore.
No, what's funny about the Japan unit was that it was taught to nine year olds. I think maybe half the year was California missiona and half the year was Japan.
Kathy, in all my years of school, I don't think we ever really covered WWII in anything but a cursory way. We would get to the civil war and then pretty much start all over again every year.
Speaking of history, Adrian, can you recommend a short but good book that covers Irish history? This came up last night in my Finnegans Wake group as one of the many,many gaps in our undertaking.
Kathy, I know I've read a couple set in contemporary Japan by Japanese writers, but I can't think of the names right now. I did read the first couple of Barry Eisler's thrillers, which were set in Tokyo and thought they were pretty good. But his protagonist is an assassin for hire so they might not be your cup of tea.
I was born and grew up in Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland. After studying philosophy at Oxford University I emigrated to New York City where I lived in Harlem for seven years working in bars, bookstores, building sites and finally the basement stacks of the Columbia University Medical School Library in Washington Heights.
In 2000 I moved to Denver, Colorado where I taught high school English and started writing fiction in earnest. My first full length novel Dead I Well May Be was shortlisted for the 2004 Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award and was picked by Booklist as one of the 10 best crime novels of the year. The sequel to that book The Dead Yard was selected by Publishers Weekly as one of the 12 best novels of 2006 and won the Audie Award for best mystery or thriller.
In mid 2008 I moved to St. Kilda, Melbourne, Australia with my wife and kids. My last book Falling Glass was Audible's Best Mystery or Thriller for 2011. I've just published a new novel for Serpents Tail called The Cold Cold Ground.
"If Raymond Chandler had grown up in Northern Ireland he would have written The Cold Cold Ground."
---The Times
"Hardboiled charm, evocative dialogue, an acute sense of place and a sardonic sense of humour make McKinty one to watch."
---The Guardian
"A literary thriller that is as concerned with exploring the poisonously claustrophobic demi-monde of Northern Ireland during the Troubles, and the self-sabotaging contradictions of its place and time, as it is with providing the genre’s conventional thrills and spills. The result is a masterpiece of Troubles crime fiction: had David Peace, Eoin McNamee and Brian Moore sat down to brew up the great Troubles novel, they would have been very pleased indeed to have written The Cold Cold Ground."
---The Irish Times
"McKinty is a big new talent."
---The Daily Telegraph
"McKinty is a gifted man with poetry coursing through his veins and thrilling writing dripping from his fingertips."
---The Sunday Independent
"Adrian McKinty is fast gaining a reputation as the finest of the new generation of Irish crime writers, and it's easy to see why on the evidence of The Cold Cold Ground."
---The Glasgow Herald
"McKinty is a storyteller with the kind of style and panache that blur the line between genre and mainstream."
---Kirkus Reviews
"McKinty's literate expertly crafted crime novel confirms his place as one of his generation's leading talents."
---Publishers Weekly
"McKinty crackles with raw talent. His dialogue is superb, his characters rich and his plotting tight and seemless. He writes with a wonderful and wonderfully humorous flair for language raising his work above most crime genre offerings and bumping it right up against literature."
---The San Francisco Chronicle
"McKinty keeps getting better. He melds the snap and crackle of the old Mickey Spillane tales with the literary skills of Raymond Chandler and sets it all down in his own artful way."
---The Rocky Mountain News
"The first of McKinty's Forsythe novels, "Dead I Well May Be," was intense, focused and entirely brilliant. This one is looser-limbed, funnier...so, I imagine, is the middle book, "The Dead Yard," which I haven't read but which Publishers Weekly included on its list of the 12 best novels of 2006, along with works by Peter Abrahams, Richard Ford, Cormac McCarthy and George Pelecanos."
---The Washington Post
"McKinty, who grew up in Northern Ireland, has an ear for language and a taste for violence, and he serves up a terrifically gory, swiftly paced thriller."
---The Miami Herald
"There's nothing like an Irish tough guy. And we're not talking about Gentleman Gerry Cooney here. No, we mean the new breed of bare-knuckle Irish writers like Adrian McKinty, Ken Bruen and John Connolly who are bringing fresh life to the crime fiction genre."
---The Philadelphia Inquirer
"McKinty's writing is dark and witty with gritty realism, spot on dialogue, and fascinating characters."
---The Chicago Sun-Times
"If you like your noir staples such as beautiful women, betrayal, murder, mixed with a heavy dose of blood, crunched bones, body parts flying around served up with some throwaway humour, you need look no further, McKinty delivers all of this with the added bonus that the writing is pitch perfect."
---The Barcelona Review
"I really enjoyed [Dead I Well May Be’s] combination of toughness and a striking literary style. Both those things are evident in Hidden River. McKinty is going places."
---The Observer
"This is a terrific read. McKinty gives us a strong non stop story with attractive characters and fine writing."
---The Morning Star
"[McKinty] draws us close and relates a fantastic tale of murder and revenge in low, wry tones, as if from the next barstool...he drops out of conversational mode to throw in a few breathtaking fever-dream sequences for flavor. And then he springs an ending so right and satisfying it leaves us numb with delight and ready to pop for another round. Start the cliche machine: This is a profoundly satisfying book from a major new talent and one of the best crime fiction debuts of the year."
---Booklist
"The story is soaked in the holy trinity of the noir thriller: betrayal, money and murder, but seen through with a panache and political awareness that give McKinty a keen edge over his rivals."
---The Big Issue
"A darkly humorous cross between a hard-boiled mystery and a Beat novel."
---The St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"A roller coaster of highs and lows, light humour and dark deeds, the powerful undercurrent of McKinty's talent will swiftly drag you away. Let's hope the author does not slow down anytime soon."
---The Irish Examiner
"A virtual carnival of slaughter."
---The Wall Street Journal
"McKinty has once again harnassed the power of poetry, violence, lust and revenge to forge a sequel to his acclaimed Dead I Well May Be."
---The Irish Post
"A pacey, violent caper in which McKinty vividly portrays [Belfast's] sleazy, still-menacing underbelly."
---The Sunday Times
"McKinty writes with the soul of a poet; his prose dances off the pages with Old World grace and haunting intensity. It's crime fiction on the level of Michael Connolly with the conviction of James Hall."
---The Jackson Clarion-Ledger
"The Bloomsday Dead is the explosive final installment in a trilogy of kinetic thrillers."
---The New York Times
"Adrian McKinty has garnered nothing but praise for his first two books. The third in the trilogy The Bloomsday Dead should leave no doubt that he is a true star. Fast moving and highly engaging this is a great book. McKinty just gets better and better."
---CrimeSpree
"Until The Dead Yard's relentless, poignant ending you'll turn these pages as quickly as you can."
---The Cleveland Plain Dealer
"McKinty's Dead Trilogy has been praised by critics, who call it "intense," "masterful" and "loaded with action." If your reading pleasure leans toward thrillers offering suspense, close calls, wry wit, sharp dialogue, local color and sudden mayhem, you wont do better."
---The Sacramento Bee
"Le Fleuve caché d'Adrian McKinty impressionne par la richesse et la diversité de son ton et de son écriture, passant avec aisance du lyrisme ample de la nostalgie de l'amour perdu au rythme saccadé du narrateur sous l'emprise de l'héroïne. Ce livre rare et maîtrisé est une réussite bien digne de la Série noire."
---Le Figaro
Eine eigentlich simple Story, die natürlich bereits als Grundlage für Hunderte Bücher und Filme diente, macht Adrian McKinty zu der mitreißenden Odyssee eines jungen Mannes, der in der Lage ist, sich seiner Umwelt anzupassen wie jene Kakerlaken, die er in seinem Harlemer Appartement jagt, studiert und sowohl angewidert awie anerkennend entkommen lässt. Nicht umsonst 1992 angesiedelt, ist Der sichere Tod der kongeniale Kommentar zum Wesen der Neunziger.
- Jochen König, krimi-couch.de
"McKinty - that guy is a friggin genius."
---Ken Bruen
"McKinty is a cross between Mickey Spillane and Damon Runyan, the toughest, the best."
A couple more books, a few birthdays, some shuffleboard then a period spent in the digestive tract of earthworms, followed by molecular breakdown, the sun boiling into space, the heat death of the universe, atomic decay, perpetual darkness, a trillion years of nothingness and then, if we're lucky, brane collapse, a new singularity and a new Big Bang.
12 comments:
Adrian, I'm loving these videos. What made you choose Kyoto?
Kyoto was my favorite place in Japan. All the history and modern conveniences but with less confusion and feeling of chaos than Tokyo. The temples there are beautiful, I remember them more than any others. Kinkakuji, Ryoanji, and the Fushimi Inari Shrine are the ones that stick out most. Our sensei was from Kyoto, so I suppose that helped us get more out of the city.
The bicycles on sidewalks are dangerous though, especially when it's raining and everyone has umbrellas.
Glenna
I had a Japan Railways pass so I could pretty much go anywhere. Kyoto was only two hours away on the bullet train...
Christie
As much as I loved the temples I also liked the old wooden neighbourhoods - the little alleys, the rice paper walls all that jazz. Gorgeous.
A friend of mine that lives in your neck of the world just went to Kyoto on her trek here to see her family, she posted tons of pictures of the temples and Zen gardens. It looks very peaceful. She mentioned she was tempted to become a monk after visiting. She also posted a pic of the bullet train, that looks fun.
Glenna
I also got a big kick out of Kyoto. It was the only city not bombed by the USAAF in WW2 because it was considered to be a cultural treasure.
The bullet train is only fun if you like comfy seats, leaving on time, travelling at 200 MPH, getting served delicious food and beer and everything being spotlessly clean. But if that isnt your scene well then you might not like it.
If they have comfortable beds, it sounds like I could live on the bullet train. I wonder if they'd let me bring my dog..?
I hope you did not stalk those geishas for too long.
All this Japan talk is making me remember that when I was a kid, we had a whole quarter or something on Japan. We even had a fairly substantial textbook on the subject. It was fun, at least I think it was. But since we didn't study any other countries at that age, I'm really wondering how and why that came up. Was it some sort of rapprochement with Japan a couple of decades after WWII? Was it just that it was so exotic? I tried to answer my own question with Google, but failed.
Interesting. I never learned anything in public school about Japan, except about WWII.
Whatever I know, I've had to read about.
If anyone has any ideas about current mysteries set in Japan, of course with an English translation, let us know. That's one way to learn about the culture.
Seana
I kept running into them actually. I would go down a side street and get lost and have to double back and run into them again. And they were walking so slowly because they were wearing clogs.
Yeah high school used to teach modules didnt they? Not sure if they do that anymore.
Kathy
Hmmm good question. I read one book called The Ruined Map which was pretty good, but the person to ask is Peter Rozovsky
Maybe the geishas were stalking you.
No, what's funny about the Japan unit was that it was taught to nine year olds. I think maybe half the year was California missiona and half the year was Japan.
Kathy, in all my years of school, I don't think we ever really covered WWII in anything but a cursory way. We would get to the civil war and then pretty much start all over again every year.
Speaking of history, Adrian, can you recommend a short but good book that covers Irish history? This came up last night in my Finnegans Wake group as one of the many,many gaps in our undertaking.
Kathy, I know I've read a couple set in contemporary Japan by Japanese writers, but I can't think of the names right now. I did read the first couple of Barry Eisler's thrillers, which were set in Tokyo and thought they were pretty good. But his protagonist is an assassin for hire so they might not be your cup of tea.
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