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   rec.arts.manga      All aspects of the Japanese storytelling      7,759 messages   

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   Message 7,468 of 7,759   
   Bobbie Sellers to Kenneth M. Lin   
   Re: SHINYA SHOKUDOU a better manga about   
   25 Sep 16 18:21:20   
   
   From: bliss@mouse-potato.com   
      
   On 09/25/2016 05:25 PM, Kenneth M. Lin wrote:   
   >   
   >   
   > "Bobbie Sellers"  wrote in message news:nrssai$6em$1@dont-email.me...   
   >   
   > On 09/20/2016 07:26 PM, Kenneth M. Lin wrote:   
   >>   
   >> There's only one item on the menu:  pork broth (ton-jiru) dinner set.   
   >> But the owner/chef will gladly make anything provided that he has the   
   >> ingredients in stock (sort of like Iron Chef but in much smaller scale).   
   >>   
   >> The curry is actually called "yesterday's curry."  In Japan or at least   
   >> in this book, they believe that curry tastes even better if it sits   
   >> overnight and reheated.   
   >   
   > Back in the day when I could eat wheat it was axiomatic that   
   > the lasagna of yesterday was better than the lasagna of the same day.   
   > Lots of dishes are like that,  But it is also comfort food that you   
   > might well have at home after preparing a batch but having leftovers.   
   > Chile with or without beans is another of the better the next day.   
   >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>   
   >   
   > Anything with melted cheese appear to taste better the next morning   
   > after it's cooled down and congealed, pizza is the best example.   
   >   
   >>   
   >> I really felt that manga like Oishinbo became too technical and   
   >> characters don't enjoy eating at all.  Rather it's more of a   
   >> transcription of what the writer interviewed so I really enjoy this   
   >> manga as they are not talking about foods or ingredients that most folks   
   >> cannot relate to.  The author also does a good job of using food as a   
   >> background for human-interest stories.   
   >>   
   >> The Western Addition Branch of SFPB stocks the first seven volumes if   
   >> anyone is interested.   
   >   
   > I imagine those are not translated to English?   
   >   
   > bliss   
   >>>>>>>>>>>>   
   >   
   > Unfortunately they were in the original Japanese.  I found volume 9   
   > yesterday but 8 must have been checked out.  I wonder if those manga are   
   > donated or they were purchased from Kinokuniya few blocks down.   
      
   	I imagine they were purchased as I see no way to directly   
   donate books to the SFPL system without them being sold to the   
   general public after your donation.  Unless you can donate a lot   
   of money to gain the status of benefactor and perhaps availability   
   of space to house your donation,   
      
   	At one point when I was more mobile I borrowed a lot of   
   Japanese cinematic work from the Western Edition branch and   
   enjoyed classics and samurai works that are barely intelligible   
   except in the action sense but the motivation will escape someone   
   who does not study Japanese history more intently than myself.   
      
   	Anime is more interesting to me than accounts of the past   
   where production costs were trimmed to the bone and significant   
   incidents were omitted for that reason.   
      
   	I also watched a lot of the price is no object Japanese   
   TV historical stories the first because I accidentally found Fuji   
   TV broadcasting on the weekend from channel 26.  That was my   
   first acquaintanceship with Musashi, then I read that big book,   
      
   > Eiji Yoshikawa's famous novel Musashi (originally serialized in   
    > Asahi Shinbun prior to World War II) is more or less based on   
    > historical events with added fictitious characters.   
    > Yoshikawa's book was termed the "Gone with the Wind of Japan"   
    > by translator, Japan expert and former ambassador   
    > Edwin O. Reischauer in the foreword to the book.   
      
   	Calling it that points out that Musashi's story   
   is as much myth and legend as the Mitchell book which put   
   out a view of the Pre-Civil War South that was a nearly   
   total invention.  That was only 80 years later and most   
   of the Musashi stuff was written (beside the stele) hundreds   
   of years later.   
      
   	Now the TV drama which ran for many weeks was good   
   but the film and the book only deal with his youthful and   
   spectacular exploits with the swords.   Being an older person   
   I wondered what happened with the rest of his life   
      
   	So in mid to late October 2006 I found the following   
   very interesting book.  The following is only one paragraph from   
   a much longer review I wrote after reading it.   
      
   >     "Miyamoto Musashi" His Life and Writings by Kenji Tokitsu,  a   
   > martial artist himself who relates all the accounts known of   
   > Musashi's life and works, the extant versions of his various   
   > martial arts rules and how the tradition, the school, the ryu, was   
   > transmitted.  He talks about the difference between the martial   
   > arts in Musashi's time when duels to the death both in the dojo and   
   > on the battlefield were common to the present day when the arts are   
   > done indoors on tatami or hardwood.  This includes a new   
   > translation of the Gorin No Sho, the Book Of 5 Rings.   
   > Reproductions of art works by Musashi are included and a portrait   
   > or two of the master.   
      
   	So this book covers Musashi's life up until his death and   
   presumed assumption into whatever comes next.   
   	It is very good.   
      
   	bliss   
   --   
   bliss dash SF 4 ever at dslextreme dot com   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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