Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Monday, December 2, 2013

JQ Magazine: Book Review - "Life in Japan: The First Year" by Victor Edison

My latest article for JQ Magazine is out. Read my book review about "Life in Japan: The First Year,"by Victor Edison.

Original Link: http://jetaany.org/2013/11/30/jq-magazine-book-review-life-japan-year-2/
Date published: November 30, 2013


By Lana Kitcher (Yamanashi-ken, 2010-12) for JQ magazine. Lana is the business development associate for Bridges to Japan. To read more about Lana’s adventures in Japan and New York, visit her blog at Kitcher’s Café.
Victor Edison is a young man who remembers always having some Japanese influences present throughout his life. His family hosted a Japanese exchange student during his childhood, and he was fascinated by anime and manga from a young age. After graduation he found himself working a job he didn’t really want that wasn’t really going anywhere. A friend that was working in Japan at the time encouraged him to apply to be an English teacher and all he could respond to this was, “why not?”

Published by Nagoya-based Big Ugly Robot PressLife in Japan: The First Year is a bilingual graphic novel written and drawn by Edison about his first year working for an English language school in Mie Prefecture. With little previous knowledge of the Japanese language or customs, he travels blindly to his new home armed only with his enthusiasm and determination to succeed, his ultimate goal to one day become a full-time artist.
His first choice was to work in Tokyo, simply because that was all he knew. After his interview with “Noba,” he soon learns that he has been offered a position in Mie, and accepts.
He starts work at an English conversation school located in a semi-rural area. While the majority of the clients were adults and young adults, the teachers often had to “teach” toddler classes as well. Because the school was located in a shopping mall, many parents would drop their kids off at the English school to fit in some uninterrupted shopping time. The teachers quickly learned that the child classes were thinly disguised babysitting sessions.
Although he often felt like he was drowning at work and struggling to keep up, when he started settling into a routine and feeling more comfortable he began taking a few trips to other locations around Japan. This gave him a new set of experiences, and new material for his comics. In addition to his traveling, he was able to start setting time aside for his art and language studies. Several of his art projects from his time in Japan can be found within the pages here.
Edison’s artistic talent captures Japan’s essence and his autobiographical account is honest and direct. JET alumni will be able to follow his story and find many of their own experiences and thoughts represented within his work. From his first encounter ordering a hamburger to his dissatisfaction with being a glorified babysitter, his tone and pace keeps the reader hooked throughout, allowing us to relive those vulnerable and turbulent first few months. He is also able to find humor in these experiences, which enable us to appreciate the moments and make a connection with the author. He is also able to write honestly and recount vividly, as we see in his visual representation.
Edison’s story is not only a great read for the former expatriate, but also for Japanese citizens that are wondering what it is like to be a foreigner in Japan. Although the Japanese translation can be distracting while reading, it allows insight into the foreign experience, which would otherwise be inaccessible to them.
By reading Life in Japan, it is possible to see that regardless of the program you work for, the age group you teach, or what you look like, many of the challenges that we face as teachers and foreigners in Japan are universal: we arrive with expectations that are quickly shaken, and we face times of uncertainty and growth. Regardless of the exact experience, we all leave Japan changed—usually in a good way—that refuses to allow us to forget the people, places, and encounters. Edison thought that teaching English in Japan would be different. He thought his coworkers would be more serious, or that he would have more free time for his art. If you just returned from Japan last week, or have been back for ten years, you’ll be able to find a chapter of this book that resonates with your own story.
Although he doesn’t mention it in great detail, it can be deduced (or learned through his blog) that Edison is still living in Japan today. He continues to follow his passion doing art, teaching English, and spending time with his family. Perhaps we will get to read about his latest adventures in his next book.
He starts off by trying to answer the question, “so what brought you to Japan?” Although he doesn’t have a concise answer by the end, he knows that it was worth it. This graphic novel is perfect for a friend who will soon be venturing to Japan to become an English teacher or alum looking for a humorous and accurate account of what it’s like to live and teach there.
There is a timeless quality to Japan that you can observe by reading works by different authors across history. Consider comparing Life in Japan to works by Lafcadio Hearn (1850-1904), in addition to my recent review on Laura Kriska’s book The Accidental Office Lady (1998). On the surface it may feel like Japan has transformed, but you will notice deep cultural roots that remain unchanged.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

The Accidental Office Lady Book Review for JETAANY JQ Magazine


By Lana Kitcher (Yamanashi-ken, 2010-12) for JQ magazine. Lana is the business development associate for Bridges to Japan and enjoys working as a freelance writer for a number of online publications. To read more about Lana’s adventures in Japan, visit her blog at Kitcher’s Café.



Laura Kriska’s experience as recounted in The Accidental Office Lady parallels in many ways what we as JET participants go through when we temporarily leave our lives and routines at home to pursue the “exotic” and uncertain terrain of a new culture.
Based on Kriska’s background and education, she was offered a two-year position at Honda Motor Company headquarters in Tokyo, being the first American woman to do so. She arrived in Japan equipped with her new business attire and a mind full of expectations and dreams about how the next two years of her life in Tokyo would unfold. She was soon instructed to join the secretariat—coordinating schedules and serving tea to managers in her new, polyester uniform.
Through the course of the book we get to see Kriska transform from a newly minted grad into a successful member of Japanese society. She starts out frustrated by her new environment and deeply disappointed that her job is not all that she hoped it would be. As the book progresses, you start to see that she is losing her childish tendencies to fight back, and eloquently navigating the culture with words and mannerisms instead of outbursts and small rebellions. She takes on more responsibility and in the end is able to create lasting change at Honda with a new employee manual in English and the elimination of the mandatory uniform rule.
As JETs, or for me at least, working in Japan was a completely different experience to traveling or studying there. Every group I represented (American, New Yorker, female, university alumni, JET Program participant, foreigner in Japan, employee at Fuefuki Board of Education, and the list goes on…) was in danger because now the citizens and coworkers were judging everyone in those groups based on their interactions with me, in and out of the workplace.
Although Kriska’s book was first published in 1997—and republished in 2011 including a new foreword by the author—the stories and struggles that Kriska experienced are the same for many working in Japan today. As I read, I could relate to her feelings and the interactions that she had with her Japanese colleagues. Kriska’s account of Japan will at brief moments seem a little dated, but in general, eerily familiar.
Several reviewers on Amazon comment on Kriska’s “complaining” tone; however, this is an intentional and necessary stylistic choice of the author. She vividly recounts her observations and feelings truthfully every step along the way. Kriska allows us to see into her thoughts and actions, which better demonstrates the way that Japan was able to change her and allow her to grow throughout the course of the two years. Not only is The Accidental Office Lady about the first American woman to work at Honda in Japan, but it is also the story of a young girl growing up, learning what it means to become an adult. The account is relevant not only for people who want to live in Japan or do business with the Japanese, but also for anyone who is going to come in contact with people of other cultures and values, which in today’s world is nearly inevitable.
If you are going to Japan soon, live there now, or have lived there already, this book is a survivor’s guide and tool for reflection and growth. It can help the reader better understand what to do, and what not to do. She teaches us that having certain feelings about our cultural interactions is normal, but that learning, challenging ourselves, and making steps toward change are imperative to the growth and understanding process. The most important message that Kriska was able to learn and hopes to convey to her audience is that cultural mistakes are likely, and even almost impossible to avoid. It does not matter that we make mistakes, but that we try to understand and to adapt. As she states in the new introduction, “The starting point of these relationships, whether they are between individual tourists or government officials, must be respect and a wish to understand the many cultural factors that exist between different countries in the world.”
Learn more about Laura Kriska and The Accidental Office Lady at her official website: www.AccidentalOfficeLady.com

Thursday, January 12, 2012

The Help by Kathryn Stockett - a Book Review


Please note: There are a few spoilers here.  I will be sure to write any spoilers in brackets {} so that you can avoid reading sections that give away parts of the book.

A novel: Published in February, 2009.
One of the books I read during 2011 was The Help.  I was inspired to read it because I saw the movie trailer on trailers.apple.com.  Wanting to see the film when it came out in December, I decided to read the book first.  Usually if I see a film before I read the book I will like it better, and vice versa.  Since it was a novel originally, I decided to start there.

I found that the book was a quick read, partially due to my interest in the subject, but also because it was written in a very simple literary/writing style.  Although Ms. Stockett worked in magazine publishing and marketing prior to writing this book, I found that the writing clearly reflected the fact that it was her first novel.  It was good writing, but simple and easy to understand.  In my opinion, many books that make it into the New York Times Best Seller list tend to have this in common.  They're written in a language that can be read and understood by the masses.

The book is divided into 34 chapters, and every few chapters is narrated by one of the following main characters; Aibileen, Miss Skeeter, or Minny.

I don't usually enjoy reading books which are written in dialect and I was nervous when I started the first chapter narrated by Aibileen, but overall it was very easy to get used to, and I thought it was done well.  Unlike in some cases, it did add to the atmosphere and style of the book.

The Help had a slow start, but picked up pace toward the middle and had me racing to the end.  In general, it left a good impression on me.  I would not name it the best book I've ever read, but I considered it an entertaining read and would recommend it to those interested in American history, racial equality, and civil rights.  I also believe that it is an inspiring story of a young woman who had a passion for writing and followed her dreams depsite the obstacles and social pressures along the way.  I suggest this book to writers who need motivation to pursue their goals.  With three female protagonists, this book may apeal to women more than it would to men, but I think that men should also give it a try.

{One complaint I have about the book is the inclusion of an unnecessary scene in which a deranged man in the nude attacks Minny and Celia Foote.  I wonder if it was added in order to show Celia and Minny's loyalty to one another, as well as the strength and guts that these two characters possessed?  But, the scene seemed like it was added as an afterthought, and was out of character.  I wanted to see how they would portray this scene in the movie however they left it out.}

{I could also tell that I was basically reading about the author's life while I was reading the novel, and I wondered if this was a good or a bad thing.  Ive been told that we're supposed to write about what we know, but is it OK that the reader can easily recognize a biography disguised as fiction?  Then again, many of the great authors have done this, and some of them do it in every novel.}

Now also a major motion picture.
Although I was captivated by the book, I never felt particularly moved.  I may have watched the film on a particularly emotional day, but I found myself choking back and wiping away tears on numerous occasions during the 146 minute rental.  In general, the story narrative was able to keep the same plot as the book more or less, but I think that the actors, especially Viola Davis who played Aibileen, were able to bring a deep emotional side to the story which I found lacking in the novel.  "[Viola Davis'] role has garnered her critical acclaim, and has started buzz for various awards nominations." - Time Magazine, Glen Levy.

{In the film I wish they had delved more in Ms. Phelan's illness, Miss Skeeter's relationship with Stuart Whitworth, Skeeter's rejection from society, the personal stories of the maids, and Celia Foote's miscarriages.  It's understandable that they couldn't get to all of this though, since it's difficult to fit a 464 page novel into a 2.4 hour film.}

Overall, The Help was definitey an enjoyable although not overly intellectually stimulating read.

Please feel free to post your thoughts, comments, and personal reactions to the book or film in the "comments section!"  You do not have to be a blogger member to post.  If you're going to reveal any spoilers, please clearly indicate so.

Happy reading!

Lana

Book image: http://tiny.cc/4wdj1
DVD image: http://tiny.cc/rdtsm

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Jane Eyre - Book Review

Please note: There may be spoilers here.  I will be sure to write any spoilers in PURPLE with brackets { } so that you can avoid reading sections that may give away parts of the book.

I have recently finished reading Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë.  I was inspired to read it for three reasons.  The first reason is that I always hear this book mentioned in popular culture such as on TV or in movies, and as I was not required to read it in school I always wondered what it was like.  The second reason is that it seems people who have read it either really like it, or really hate it and I wanted to know first-hand the causes of this split.  The last reason is that recently I've been thinking I should read some of the "classic books" and discover for myself their greatness.  It is funny too, that so many of the classics mention other classics and famous authors within them!  The more I read, the more I want to read!


I've read a few books written in older English, and they are usually very difficult for me to understand.  I thought that this book was going to be similar, but I was happily surprised to find that the English used in Jane Eyre is actually quite simple and easy to follow.  The book is long however, and may be a deterrent for some hoping to read it.

I saw the recent Jane Eyre film before I read the book, but I wouldn't recommend doing so.  Actually, I wouldn't recommend it for any book.  If you see the movie first, I think you'll be less likely to enjoy the book.  You already know what happens, and you already have the director's interpretation of the story and characters in your mind.

{Just by viewing the trailer, I thought it would be a ghost story of sorts.  Towards the end we figure out that it is not a ghost story and ends up being a classic love story; the tales of one girl's life.  I enjoyed reading about the time period and learning about the story and characters in more detail, but it might have been a better experience to go into it with a blank slate.}

All in all, I thought it was an pleasurable read.  Towards the middle the plot lagged a little bit and it took me some time to read through it, but it's no wonder that the classic has remained popular and withstood the test of time.  If you have a lot of time and are interested in reading some old literature, I would recommend this book.  If you're looking for a light and quick novel that can be finished in a matter of days, save this one for a different occasion.

Happy reading!

Next up is The Help by Kathryn Stockett.  Check the "Read Read Read" tab for the next book review, coming soon.