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Leza Lowitz
For Leza Lowitz's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
CULTURE / Books
Feb 22, 2000
The mathematics of love and loss
RABBIT OF THE NETHERWORLD, by Reiko Koyanagi. Illustrated by Monica Tamano, translated by Hiroaki Sato. Red Moon Press, 1999, 62 pp., $12 (paper). "Rabbit of the Netherworld" is a unique and often compelling memoir, a fragmentary poetic recreation of the author's wartime childhood and its many painful events. A lonely girl, traumatized by air raids, relocation to the countryside and one loss after another, searches for connection and comfort amid the ruins. She finds it mainly in spirits from the netherworld -- a parade of dead aunts and uncles, and an odd rabbit that keeps her company on moonlit nights.
CULTURE / Books
Aug 31, 1999
Buddhist riffs that are and aren't poetry
For some time now, the trappings (if not the tenets) of Buddhism and Buddhist philosophy have been making their way into the popular Western consciousness.
CULTURE / Books
May 11, 1999
Coming of age, piece by piece
NAMAKO: Sea Cucumber, by Linda Watanabe McFerrin. Coffee House Press, 1998, 256 pp., $14.95 (paper). Like the sea cucumber, Ellen, the multicultural 9-year-old narrator of Linda Watanabe McFerrin's delightful first novel, cannot be easily classified. Animal or vegetable? Living and feeling, or merely alive? Looking at one of these specimens, Ellen laments, "It must be horrible to be so strange that nobody knows what you really are."
CULTURE / Books
Apr 27, 1999
Haiku as a tether to life and emotional safety net
HAIKU: This Other World, by Richard Wright, edited by Yoshinobu Hakutani and Robert L. Tener, with an introduction by Julia Wright. Arcade Publishers, distributed by Little, Brown, 1998, 320 pp., $23.50 (cloth). Richard Wright (1908-60) author of the classic 20-th-century novels "Black Boy" and "Native Son," was living in exile in Paris and facing death when he began to write haiku. So deep was his connection and so strong his commitment to the form that he composed over 4,000 verses during the last 18 months of his life, carrying his notebook with him throughout the day.

Longform

Later this month, author Shogo Imamura will open Honmaru, a bookstore that allows other businesses to rent its shelves. It's part of a wave of ideas Japanese booksellers are trying to compete with online spaces.
The story isn't over for Japan's bookstores