The Hon Podcast is hosted by writer and Japan Times columnist Amy Chavez.
BOA Podcast 38: Burritt Sabin on Yokohama and Kamakura
Burritt Sabin tells fascinating true stories that take place in Yokohama and Kamakura
BOA Podcast 37: Lesley Downer, The Shortest History of Japan
Lesley Downer talks about some of the powerful women who shaped Japan in her new book “The Shortest History of Japan: From Mythical Origins to Pop Culture Powerhouse.”
BOA Podcast 36: Robt. Whiting—Gangsters, Fraudsters, Dreamers & Spies
Fascinating stories of foreigners who made waves and achieved notoriety in post-World War II Japan.
BOA Podcast 35—The Healing Power of Poet Ōtagaki Rengetsu
John Stevens talks about his latest book The Lotus Moon: Art and Poetry of Buddhist Nun Otagaki Rengetsu
BOA Podcast 34—Angus Waycott Walks Sado Island
Given the choice, no-one ever went to Sado. For more than a thousand years, this island in the Sea of Japan was a place of exile.
BOA Podcast 33—Ai and the Future of Books
AI will definitely affect book publishing, but shaping the process early on will be key.
BOA Podcast 32: Frederik Schodt—historical non-fiction on Japan
American Richard Risley Carlisle brings Japanese acrobats on a tour of the U.S. and the world in the late 1860’s, before Japan had opened up to the world.
BOA Podcast 31: John Grant Ross on Taiwan & Japan
John Ross talks about books on Taiwan, Japan and China as well as the fate of the travelogue
BOA Podcast 30: Japan in 31 Passions, with John Rucynski
31 stories of people who have found their life passion in Japan.
BOA Podcast 29: Stephen Mansfield talks Tokyo
Stephen Mansfield, author of Tokyo: A Biography , is a British writer and photo-journalist based in Japan. His photo-journalism work has appeared in over 60 magazines, newspapers and journals worldwide including the Kyoto Journal, CNN Travel and Nikkei Asia. To date, he has had twenty books published, four of them on the culture and people More…
BOA Podcast 28: Translating Hiromi Ito’s “The Thorn Puller” with Jeffrey Angles
Hiromi Ito author of The Thorn Puller (originally published in Japanese as Toge-nuki Jizo: Shin Sugamo Jizo engi) came to national attention in Japan in the 1980s for her groundbreaking poetry about pregnancy, childbirth, and female sexuality. After relocating to the U.S. in the 1990s, she began to write about the immigrant More…
BOA Podcast 27 Sarah Coomber: The Female Experience Teaching in Japan
Sarah Coomber is the author of The Same Moon (Camphor Press, 2020), a memoir about what happened when she traded out her wrecked Minnesota life for two years in rural Japan. The Same Moon is possibly the only book about the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program (JET) experience written from a woman’s point of More…
BOA Podcast 26: Azby Brown on Sustainability and his Book “Just Enough”
In this episode of the BOA podcast, host Amy Chavez talks with Azby Brown, author of Just Enough: Lessons from Japan for Sustainable Living, Architecture, and Design. Brown is an expert on Japanese architecture, design and environment. He has lived in Japan since 1985. His previous books include The Genius of Japanese Carpentry, Small Spaces, More…
BOA Podcast 25: Traveling Japan as a Blind Person, with Maud Rowell
Maud Rowell talks about traveling around Japan, and what makes Japan’s big cities so user-friendly for the visually impaired.
BOA Podcast 24—Moving to Japan’s Countryside
Fixing up a house and living in Japan’s countryside.
BOA Podcast 23—Spirit of Shizen: The Nature of Japan Through its 72 Seasons
Podcast host Amy Chavez talks to Robert Weis, curator of Luxembourg’s National Museum of Natural History’s upcoming exhibit, “Spirit of Shizen – The Nature of Japan Through its 72 Seasons” running from July 1 to August 31, 2022. An accompanying catalogue, in the form of an anthology, is also available featuring essays on Japan’s seasons. More…
BOA Podcast 22—Cody Poulton Introduces Japan’s Performing Arts
Podcast host Amy Chavez talks with author Cody Poulton about Japanese theater, in particular Noh theater. Poulton recently retired from University of Victoria in Canada, where he taught Japanese literature, theater and culture for over 30 years. He is also a translator of Japanese fiction and drama. He is author of Spirits of Another Sort: More…
BOA Podcast 21: John Stevens—A Lifetime of Publishing
This week author and translator John Stevens joins us from Hawaii. Stevens has penned many books over his long exalted career, mainly books dealing with Japanese martial arts, poetry and biography. “A book should be enlightening for the writer, and for the people reading it.” —John Stevens Ep. 21 Show Notes:
BOA Podcast 20: Abby Denson talks Japan via Comics
Today we have with us Abby Denson, award-winning author of Cool Japan Guide: Fun in the Land of Manga, Lucky Cats and Ramen, Cool Tokyo Guide: Adventures in the City of Kawaii Fashion, Train Sushi and Godzilla the Kitty Sweet Tooth series (with Utomaru) and her upcoming book which we’re going to talk about More…
BOA Podcast 19: Novelist David Joiner talks “Kanazawa”
David Joiner talks about his novel “Kanazawa” the setting of which is in Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan
BOA Podcast 18: Liza Dalby on geisha, kimono, and translating Setouchi Jakucho’s “Places”
In this episode of the Books on Asia Podcast, sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, host Amy Chavez talks with anthropologist, shamisen player, author and translator Liza Dalby about her books and her new translation of the recently deceased novelist cum Buddhist nun Setouchi Jakuchō’s memoir Places. Liza is author of the Geisha, Kimono: Fashioning Culture, More…
BOA Podcast 17: Kathleen Burkinshaw, Second-Generation A-Bomb Victim
In this episode of the Books on Asia Podcast, sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, host Amy Chavez talks with Kathleen Burkinshaw in the U.S. about her book The Last Cherry Blossom, and about hibakusha, the Japanese word that refers to victims of the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki that ended WWII. Podcast 17 More…
BOA Podcast 16: Meredith McKinney on Saigyō and “Gazing at the Moon”
In this episode of the Books on Asia Podcast, sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, we have guest interviewer Lisa Wilcut speaking with award-winning writer and translator Meredith McKinney. McKinney is translator of many Japanese classics such as Sei Shonagon’s 11th century classic The Pillow Book, and the 14th century Essays in Idleness, published together with More…
BOA Podcast 15: Alex Kerr Discusses his Latest Book—”Another Bangkok”
On this episode of the Books on Asia Podcast, sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, we have returning to the show Alex Kerr, author of such notable books as Lost Japan, Dogs and Demons, Finding the Heart Sutra and Another Kyoto. Today Alex is going to talk to podcast host Amy Chavez about his latest book More…
BOA Podcast 14: Yamamba—Japanese Mountain Witch—with Rebecca Copeland and Linda C. Ehrlich
In this episode of the Books on Asia Podcast, host Amy Chavez talks with the co-editors of Yamamba: In Search of the Japanese Mountain Witch, an anthology just released by Stone Bridge Press. Rebecca Copeland is a professor of Japanese literature, a writer of fiction (The Kimono Tattoo) and literary criticism, and a translator of More…
BOA Podcast 13: Kyoto’s “Gion Festival: Exploring its Mysteries” with Catherine Pawasarat
How to enjoy Kyoto’s Gion Festival
BOA Podcast 12: The Art of the Short Story with Tina deBellegarde
On the Books on Asia Podcast episode 12: The Art of the Short Story, podcast host Amy Chavez talks with Tina deBellegarde about what makes a good short story, and why certain short story writers are so appealing. Tina has been nominated for the Agatha Award for Best First Novel, has a short story published More…
BOA Podcast 11: Robert Whiting Talks Baseball and Tokyo Junkie
In this episode of the Books on Asia podcast, show host Amy Chavez talks with Robert Whiting about his just released memoir Tokyo Junkie: 60 Years of Bright Lights and Back Alleys . . . and Baseball (Stone Bridge Press, April, 2021). Whiting is known for his numerous books on Japanese baseball: The Chrysanthemum More…
BOA Podcast 10: Wes Lang, Hiking and Trekking the Japan Alps and Mount Fuji
In this episode of The Books on Asia Podcast host Amy Chavez talks with author Wes Lang about his guidebook Hiking and Trekking the Japan Alps and Mount Fuji: Northern, Central and Southern Alps. Wes also recounts his adventures bagging all 100 peaks in the hyakumeizan (Japan’s 100 Mountains).
BOA Podcast 9: Janine Beichman on translating Japanese Haiku and Tanka
In this episode of The Books on Asia Podcast host Amy Chavez talks with author and translator Janine Beichman, whose translations include two books of poems compiled by Makoto Ōoka: Sleepless Tossing of the Planets: Selected Poems (Kurodohan, 2019) and Ori Ori no Uta: Poems for All Seasons (Tankoban, 2001). She has also penned two More…
BOA Podcast 8: Alex Kerr, author of Finding the Heart Sutra
In this episode of the Books on Asia podcast, host Amy Chavez talks with Alex Kerr about his new book Finding the Heart Sutra: Guided by a Magician, an Art Collector and Buddhist Sages from Tibet to Japan. (Click “more” below to see the Show Notes, which include an encapsulated version of the interview). To More…
BOA Podcast 7: Richard Lloyd Parry, author of Ghosts of the Tsunami
In this episode of the Hon podcast, host Amy Chavez talks with author Richard Lloyd Parry about his books Ghosts of the Tsunami and People Who Eat Darkness: The Fate of Lucie Blackman. (Click “more” below to see the Show Notes).
BOA Podcast 6: Lena Baibikov, translator of Haruki Murakami non-fiction
In this episode of the Hon podcast, host Amy Chavez talks with Lena Baibikov who has translated Haruki Murakami’s non-fiction works from Japanese into Russian. Lena has translated What I Talk About When I Talk About Running, Radio Murakami and a book of Murakami’s short stories as well as works by Banana Yoshimoto, Ryu More…
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: More…
BOA Podcast 4: Barry Lancet, author of Tokyo Kill
Author Barry Lancet chats with podcast host Amy Chavez about Lancet’s popular thriller series (Japantown, Tokyo Kill, Pacific Burn, and The Spy Across the Table) based on the exploits of Jim Brody, an antiques dealer who travels between Japan, Asia and the U.S.
BOA Podcast 3: Juliet Winters Carpenter talks about translating Japanese Literature
In this episode of the Books on Asia podcast, Amy meets up with Juliet Winters Carpenter to talk about her 70 or so translated works of Japanese literature including Shion Miura’s The Great Passage, Minae Mizumura’s A True Novel, Shiba Ryōtaro’s Clouds Above the Hill, Jun’ichiro Saga’s Memories of Wind and Waves, and Abe More…
BOA Podcast 2: Judith Pascoe on Wuthering Heights
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BOA Podcast 1: John Dougill, founder of Writers in Kyoto
John Dougill talks about Japan’s indigenous religion of Shinto, its kami (deities) and the designation of Ise Shrine as the center of worship for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.