Category: Issue 5

Introduction

Issue 5: Hikes, Pilgrimages and Journeys in Japan

In this issue we introduce books—classic and new—on the many famous journeys through Japan documented via guidebooks and travelogues. We cover mountain hikes, old roads to Edo, ancient pilgrimage trails, an island-hopping excursion and nation-crossing peregrinations. From classic must-read travel writing such as Oliver Statler’s Japanese Pilgrimage and Donald Richie’s The Inland Sea to Japan’s More…

Podcast

BOA Podcast 5: William Scott Wilson, author of Walking the Kiso Road


In this episode of the “Hon” podcast, host Amy Chavez talks with William Scott Wilson, author and translator of over a dozen books on Japan and China. They briefly discuss a few of these including, Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai (by Yamamoto Tsunetomo), The Book of 5 Rings (by Miyamoto Musashi), and Cultivating Ch’i: A Samurai Physician’s Teachings on the Way of Health (by Kaibara Ekiken) before they zero in on the writing of Walking the Kiso Road. In this episode the author reveals a surprising fact about himself that we never knew before! (hint: If you like to kayak, you’ll definitely want to check this out). Show Notes available by clicking “more” below but be warned, they include spoilers.

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Walking the Kiso Road

Step back into old Japan in William Scott Wilson’s fascinating modern travelogue.

Shank’s Mare

Japan’s most celebrated comic novel of the Tokaido, originally published in 1802.

Emplacing a Pilgrimage

The Ōyama mountain cult and beliefs, practices, and infrastructure associated with the sacred site

Unbeaten Tracks in Japan

An eye-opening account of a solo woman’s journey through Japan on horse, carriage and foot in 1878.

Japanese Pilgrimage

The book that started started it all for foreigners venturing out on the Shikoku 88-Temple Pilgrimage.

Making Pilgrimages

For those who want to delve more deeply into meaning and practice of the Shikoku Pilgrimage.

The Inland Sea

The classic travel journal on island-hopping in Japan’s Seto Inland Sea

The Roads to Sata

A travel classic, Alan Booth’s walk across 2,000 miles of rural Japan.

Blog, Issue 5

Food along the Nakasendo

By Amy Chavez The Nakasendo was an Edo Period (1603-1868) road used for travel between the capital of Edo (Tokyo) and Kyoto, the former capital. The 69 post towns along the way provided accommodation and services to daimyo and their entourages, who passed through on their sankin kōtai biennial visits to the Tokugawa shogunate. I’m More…

Issue 5, New Writing

Visiting Holy Places, by Eve Kushner

How many cartoons have I seen in which a man climbs a craggy precipice in search of a wise religious figure? Why must sages dispense advice from the highest places? To put it more broadly, why do people think that one has to ascend to find religious purity? It must be related to the idea More…

Blog, Issue 5

Exploring the Mackerel Trail

By Amy Chavez The Wakasa Road is a historical trail that helped advance Japan’s culture and cuisine. The Wakasa region of Fukui Prefecture, on the nation’s west coast, was one of the strategic miketsukuni regions of Japan that produced food for the emperor in ancient times. Wakasa-mono were delectables from the Japan Sea such as More…

Issue 5, New Writing

Excerpt—Choosing the Right Straw, by Edward Levinson

on the road’s edge           道の端 five snake gourds             からすうり五個 protect the mountain       山護る (michi no haji, karasu uri go-ko, yama mamoru) I knew all about the magic of using rice straw. It is one of the main methods of Fukuoka-san’s Natural Farming (see One Straw Revolution, by Masanobu Fukuoka). In the mountains of Kyōto, his More…