Podcasts

The Hon Podcast is hosted by writer and Japan Times columnist Amy Chavez.

BOA Podcast 71: Anti-Foreign Sentiment, Overtourism and Tourist Behavior

Subscribe to the BOA podcast here Episode Notes Amy discusses the relationship between anti-foreign sentiment, overtourism, and tourist manners in Japan. Protests in Kyoto, Kamakura, and Tokyo claim that overtourism negatively impacts the daily lives of locals. Right-wing populist groups like the Sanseito party further use overtourism to fuel anti-foreign sentiment. With Japan’s aging population, More…

BOA Podcast 70: Replay—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 for the deposed, disgraced or just plain distrusted — ex-emperors, aristocrats, poets, priests and convicted criminals alike.

BOA Podcast 69: Robert Norris on Living and Writing in Japan

Subscribe to the BOA podcast here Robert Norris has lived in Japan since 1983, mostly in Dazaifu, near Fukuoka in Kyushu. After retiring from university teaching in 2016, he returned to his long-standing passion for writing. The result was a heartfelt memoir about his life – and his mother’s – titled: The Good Lord Willing More…

BOA Podcast 68: T.R. Reid and How to Ski Japan!

Subscribe to the BOA podcast here Show Notes In a tribute to the 2026 Winter Olympics, Amy discusses previous Washington Post Tokyo Bureau Chief T.R. Reid’s guidebook called Ski Japan! (Kodansha, 1993). Japan has hosted the Winter Olympics 2 times: 1972 (Sapporo) and 1998 (Nagano). T.R. Reid lived in Japan for five years during the More…

BOA Podcast 67: China’s Backstory with Lee Moore

Subscribe to the BOA podcast here Show Notes John Ross talks to Lee Moore about his book, China’s Backstory: The History Beijing Doesn’t Want You to Read (2025, Unsung Voices Books). The book looks at the four important China-related stories that often make headlines: Taiwan, Xinjiang, the Chinese economy, and Hong Kong. In this conversation, More…

BOA Podcast 66: Japan Guides and Guidebooks 1891-2019

Subscribe to the BOA podcast here Amy muses on the death of guidebooks due to the internet and reminisces about some oldies but goodies on Japan, from John Murray’s Handbook for Travellers in Japan (1891) to more recent guidebooks specializing in hiking mountains and pilgrimages. Books Mentioned John Murray’s Handbook for Travellers in Japan (1890’s) More…

BOA Podcast 65: Simon Winchester’s Biography of Joseph Needham (with Tim McGirk)

Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast The Man Who Loved China by Simon Winchester (with Tim McGirk) John Ross talks with Tim McGirk about Simon Winchester’s masterpiece, The Man Who Loved China. That man was Joseph Needham, an eccentric Cambridge biochemist who traveled through war-torn China to document the nation’s scientific heritage. The ensuing More…

BOA Podcast 64: New Book Releases 2026 on Japan, Taiwan

Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast This episode of the Books on Asia podcast introduces new fiction and non-fiction on Japan to be published this year, along with two upcoming books on Taiwan. We present the books here in the order they appear on the podcast. Listen to the episode for more information on More…

BOA Podcast 62: The 1910 Japan-British Exhibition

Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast Episode Notes The 1910 Japan-Britain Exhibition – with Formosa Files In this special crossover episode, John Ross and Eryk Michael Smith from Formosa Files: the History of Taiwan Podcast explore how Japan showcased its “model colony” of Formosa (1895–1945). First up is the 1910 Japan–British Exhibition in London, More…

BOA Podcast 61: Amy Reads from her Book: The Widow, The Priest and The Octopus Hunter

In 1997, Amy moved to a small island of just 950 people in Japan’s Seto Inland Sea. She rented an akiya (empty house) from a widow whose soldier-husband had died in WWII. When Amy clears out the old woman’s possessions she becomes fascinated with the woman, her life of hardship, and her will to overcome the Japan’s wartorn past.In 1997, Amy moved to a small island of just 950 people in Japan’s Seto Inland Sea. She rented an akiya (empty house) from a widow whose soldier-husband had died in WWII. Six years later, when the widow dies, Amy purchases her home and must finally clear out the old woman’s possessions. This is when Amy becomes fascinated with the woman, her life of hardship, and her will to overcome the past.

BOA Podcast 60: Amy & John Discuss Childhood Reading Influences

Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast Episode Notes John Ross, during his schoolboy days in New Zealand, was interested in far-flung places such as South America, Papua New Guinea, Ancient Greece and Rome, as well as books on World War One and Two. He read a lot of youth fiction starting at 10 years More…

BOA Podcast 59: Carol Isaak on Portland’s Lan Su Chinese Garden

Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast Episode Summary Lan Su Garden is a magnificent Ming scholar garden in downtown Portland, Oregon. It opened in 2000, a collaboration between sister cities Portland and Suzhou, hence the name: Lan Su. Photographer and local resident Carol Isaak found refuge there during the Covid pandemic, fell in love More…

BOA Podcast 57: Amy & John’s Holiday Gift Book Recommendations

Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast Episode Summary Looking for a great gift for a book-lover? We’ve got you covered! From coffee table books to fiction, historical fiction and expat accounts of life in Asia, Amy Chavez and John Ross weigh in on their favorites. Episode Notes Books discussed in this episode, in order More…

BOA Podcast 56: Ted Goossen on translating Hiromi Kawakami’s “Third Love”

Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast Episode Summary Super translator Ted Goossen talks about everything from first landing in Japan in 1968 to the differences between translating Haruki Murakami and Hiromi Kawakami, especially the complexities of Hiromi Kawakami’s latest book The Third Love. Episode Notes Amy has a deep discussion with Ted Goossen about More…

BOA Podcast 52: Lauren Scharf on Traditional Japanese Houses and MinkaCon 2025

Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast Amy Chavez sits down with Lauren Scharf of The Minka Preservation Society (MINKA), an organization dedicated to preserving traditional farm houses and townhouses that retain the cultural essence of Japan’s past.   Lauren Scharf talks about minka, kominka and akiya houses in Japan and how to tell the More…

BOA Podcast 50: Sally Burdon Talks Asia Bookroom and Rare Books

 Subscribe to the Books on Asia podcast Today I sit down with Sally Burdon, a bookseller at Asia Bookroom in Canberra, Australia, which specializes in rare and secondhand books. From Japanese woodblock prints to Chinese classics and Taiwanese travelogues, Asia Bookroom is a treasure trove for readers and collectors alike. Asia Bookroom exhibits their More…

BOA Podcast 46: Héctor García

 Today we talk with  Héctor García. Born in Spain, García has lived in Japan for the past two decades. He is author of A Geek in Japan, The Magic of Japan and the bestselling Ikigai: The Japanese Secret to a Long and Happy Life, among other books. Today, he discuss his recent release Spirit More…

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 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 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 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 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 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 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.