Book Discoveries: Tuesdays with Morrie
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Book Discoveries: Tuesdays with Morrie

I don’t know what took me so long to read Tuesdays with Morrie. It’s famous and recommended constantly, but I somehow let it go by the wayside for years. Finally, I got my hands on a copy, and it was horse-blinders until I was finished with it. I read the whole book in a day: I started it after the morning meeting – I read it between classes – and then I sped home so I could finish it in my apartment. ..

I Heart T-Points: My Darling is a Foreigner
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I Heart T-Points: My Darling is a Foreigner

I am dating an amazing Japanese woman, and therefore it was only natural that we would eventually watch ダーリンは外国人 (My Darling is a Foreigner) together. In fact, before the movie even came out on DVD, she started reading the manga it was based on and had me doing the same…

I Heart T-Points: RoboGeisha
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I Heart T-Points: RoboGeisha

There are many ways to study geisha. Middle-aged American women have Memoirs of a Geisha and Oprah. Tourists can dress like geisha in Kyoto for an in-their-shoes experience. The rich and connected can attend legitimate geisha performances. Academics turn to scholarship and classical literature on the topic. Me? I learned everything I need to know about geisha from a film released in 2009 by director Iguchi Noboru (who also makes porn). His film taught me the four tenets of geisha:

Book Discoveries: The Elegance of the Hedgehog
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Book Discoveries: The Elegance of the Hedgehog

Translated from French to English, The Elegance of the Hedgehog is a powerful novel that brings two very extraordinary characters to life. Renee Michel is a concierge at an upper-class Parisian apartment complex. She constantly has to conceal her intelligence from the other tenants in her building for fear they may not appreciate her insights and philosophies – especially if they are coming from one of their apartment employees.

Book Discoveries: The Sirens of Titan
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Book Discoveries: The Sirens of Titan

Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., by my own personal standards, is quite possibly the God of creativity and existential thought.….at least as far as putting it to literature goes. Lately, I’ve decided to ‘go back’ and read some of his classics. For those who haven’t yet already read Cat’s Cradle please do, as it will make your head spin in all the right ways. I am definitely one who has added “busy, busy, busy” to my list of appropriate responses of the question, “how are you?”

I Heart T-Points: Hirokazu Koreeda’s After Life
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I Heart T-Points: Hirokazu Koreeda’s After Life

If you consider yourself a cinema enthusiast, you need to see the Hirokazu Koreeda (pronounced Kore-eda) film After Life (ワンダフルライフ). After Life is more than just a good movie; it presents a vision of life after death that can give anyone hope. Film lovers especially, however, will find themselves nodding in ferocious agreement when one of the deceased remarks, “…that really is heaven.”

Book Discoveries: The Time Traveler’s Wife
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Book Discoveries: The Time Traveler’s Wife

It’s a bit of an unsung hero for those who have read it. It was recommended to me as a good plane book and while I read it on both my connecting flights, I had someone comment on how much they loved it each time. I also find myself doing the same if I hear anyone mention it. I can’t help it; I just start to ask questions: “Don’t you love it?”; “Isn’t that exactly what it would be like if someone could time travel?”; “How far are you in the book?” I just convulse with happiness that someone else is reading this book and I want to bond with them over our mutual reading.

Book Discoveries: Little, Big
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Book Discoveries: Little, Big

It was not so much a book as an atmosphere. I was completely enveloped in the world of this novel; sometimes I couldn’t tell what was ‘real’ and what was ‘imaginary’. This was until I stopped trying to find a separation and just marinated in the book. It became, in this way, quite an existential read. Surrendering the urge to define what’s “really happening” and what’s going on in the “dream world” was quite provocative and ultimately rewarding as a reader, you begin to discover that there may not be that large of a separation at all.