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Art & Photography|Granta 127
Art & Photography|Granta 127
Primal Mountain
Yuji Hamada
‘In March 2011, the Great East Japan Earthquake occurred.’
Fiction|Granta 127
Fiction|Granta 127
A Clean Marriage
Sayaka Murata
‘Frequency of sex since marriage: zero.’
Sayaka Murata on a sexless marriage and the ‘Clean Breeder’ technique for pleasureless reproduction.
Fiction|Granta 127
Fiction|Granta 127
Breakfast
Toshiki Okada
‘If I had known she were heading for Tokyo then, and if I had known she thought of Tokyo as a city of zombies, I would have wanted to know, of course, whether she saw me that way, too.’
Fiction|Granta 127
Fiction|Granta 127
Variations on a Theme by Mister Donut
David Mitchell
‘But what if he answers in Martian? I’ll die.’
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Linked
Ruth Ozeki
‘old poems, like polished stones, / tumbled words to break my teeth on.’
Fiction|Granta 127
Fiction|Granta 127
Things Remembered and Things Forgotten
Kyoko Nakajima
It was something Takashi remembered but Masaru had forgotten.
Fiction|Granta 127
Fiction|Granta 127
Final Fantasy III
Tao Lin
‘On the F train to Manhattan I emailed a friend in the UK. I said I couldn’t write my essay about Japan.’
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Blue Moon
Hiromi Kawakami
‘Rather than death itself, it is the disappearance of traces that seems unbearable and sad. The disappearance of all signs that I existed.’
Poetry|Granta 127
Poetry|Granta 127
The Japanese Firefly Squid
Kimiko Hahn
‘nothing like an ancient corridor where a / woman is stripped of resistance.’
Fiction|Granta 127
Fiction|Granta 127
Spider Lilies
Hiroko Oyamada
‘The breeze smelled of many things: autumn and earth, the green of the countryside, face powder and old age.’
Art & Photography|Granta 127
Art & Photography|Granta 127
Out of Ark
Yumiko Utsu
‘How long has it been since Noah and his passengers set off in their vessel?’
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
The Beauty of the Package
Pico Iyer
‘You can throw yourself into any fantasy, she (and her country) might have been saying, so long as you don’t mistake it for real life.’
Fiction|Granta 127
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Printable
Toh EnJoe
‘Which is scarier: that the past could actually change or that you could just think it did?’
Fiction|Granta 127
Fiction|Granta 127
After the War, Before the War
David Peace
‘At last, at last. His first steps, on Chinese soil.’
Art & Photography|Granta 127
Art & Photography|Granta 127
From Site
Daisuke Yokota
‘The photograph we are left with and the memory of that time do not progress along the same time axes.’
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Scavengers
Adam Johnson
‘I was dying to buy something, anything that would help my wife and children understand the profound surrealism and warped reality I’d experienced on my research trip to North Korea.’
Fiction|Granta 127
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Essays & Memoir|Granta 127
Arrival Gates
Rebecca Solnit
‘It was like trying to go back to before the earthquake, to before knowledge.’
Fiction|Granta 127
Fiction|Granta 127
Pink
Tomoyuki Hoshino
‘Spinning makes all that is illusory fall away.’ Translated from the Japanese by Brian Bergstrom.
The Online Edition
Fiction|The Online Edition
Bad Seeds
Masatsugu Ono
‘Evil, she told herself. That was the name of the flower.’
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Sasayama
Nadifa Mohamed
‘It was in one of those listless summers after graduation that I found myself in the small Japanese town of Sasayama.’
Art & Photography|The Online Edition
Rainbow
Taisuke Koyama & Ivan Vartanian
‘I now see Melting Rainbows as a self-referential project to parse the universe which we inhabit.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
Smartening Up
Aoko Matsuda
‘‘Let’s become monsters together,’ she said, looking straight into my eyes.’
In Conversation|The Online Edition
Motoyuki Shibata | Interview
Motoyuki Shibata & Fran Bigman
‘I always think the borderline between reality and non-reality, or fantasy, is much thinner in Japanese fiction than in American or British fiction.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
Bucket of Eels
Mitsuyo Kakuta
‘I was gazing into my empty bowl and realizing how little time it takes to eat when you’re not carrying on a conversation.’
Poetry|The Online Edition
Three Poems
Sakutarō Hagiwara
‘What I do not have is Everything: / how is it that I won’t bear this neediness?’
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Three Japanese Books
Samantha Harvey, Phil Klay & Tao Lin
‘Each word is a snowflake falling, and with each paragraph the snow settles deeper.’
In Conversation|The Online Edition
David Peace and Kyoko Nakajima in Conversation
Kyoko Nakajima & David Peace
‘When we talk about history, the dangers of embellishment, fabrication and wilful distortion are ever-present’
In Conversation|The Online Edition
Hiromi Kawakami | Podcast
Hiromi Kawakami, Anne Meadows & Asa Yoneda
‘Looking back, I never was aware of feeling that close to death, but actually if you think about it, just living every day there is a very small but definitely existing chance of death, whatever you're doing, wherever you are.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
Harmonica Hare
Yoko Ogawa
Everyone knows this country and no one knows it. Here are twenty new Japans by...
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Toh EnJoe | First Sentence
Toh EnJoe
‘I think that the thing called thought can be viewed as rooted in the very real phenomenon of neurons firing.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
The Bees that Disappeared
Keiichiro Hirano
‘It was during this period that I got to know K, one of the local mailmen.’
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
The Casualties
Katie Kitamura
‘The following are some of the Japanese players who also appeared in the major leagues during the Age of Ichiro.’
Poetry|The Online Edition
Silver Threads
Greg Alan Brownderville & Zach Savich
‘Time trapped me in this canyon, this dark jar — / jabbed holes in the sky to spare me light and air.’
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
The Power of a Grandmother Named Tranquilina
Valerie Miles
'Never underestimate the power of a grandmother to leave her mark on coming generations, or the taste of her cooking to cause an epiphany big enough to give the world a shiver.'
Fiction|The Online Edition
Filling Up With Sugar
Yuten Sawanishi
‘The vagina was the first part of her mother’s body that turned to sugar.’
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Maruti 800
Rana Dasgupta
‘Like a tiny old woman surrounded by strapping grandsons, the Maruti 800 was in fact the progenitor of all that new, muscular, vehicular variety.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
O-bakanaru
Eric Ozawa
‘When your wife walks away from you, she does not disappear. When you turn your back, she does not vanish. She will be there when you open your eyes.’
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Heart and Soul in Every Stitch
Tash Aw
‘Where wealth and technology go, culture quickly follows, and soon it became acceptable, even desirable, to express an interest in Japan beyond the mere practicality offered by its products.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
Hush . . . Hush Sweet Charlotte
Kazushige Abe
‘The crucial thing was to cool the baby off, bring the fever down.’
Poetry|The Online Edition
Two Poems
Kimiko Hahn
‘Certainly the tide or the dog striding along the sluff of seaweed, / this afternoon – brown, light green, black green, white and red.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
Japan Lights
Sarah Moss
‘She kneels and bows her head almost to the floor, as if pretending he’s one of her idols.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
Eight Trains
Alberto Olmos
‘To go is always to go somewhere; returning, you return to nowhere. That’s the way it is.’
Fiction|The Online Edition
Bakamonotako
Brenda Shaughnessy
‘Bakamonotako felt she didn’t need all eight of her appendages. Four would do.’
In Conversation|The Online Edition
Ruth Ozeki | Podcast
Ruth Ozeki & Yuka Igarashi
‘And I never was quite sure who I was or who I was supposed to be.’