At Home in Japan: A Foreign Woman's Journey of Discovery
By (Author) Rebecca Otowa
Tuttle Publishing
Tuttle Publishing
20th June 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
Travel and holiday guides
Asian history
Social and cultural history
Biography: philosophy and social sciences
305.813052186092
Hardback
176
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
425g
What would it be like to move to Japan, leaving everyone you know behind, to become part of a traditional Japanese household At Home in Japan tells an extraordinary true story of a foreign woman who goes through an amazing transformation, as she makes a move from a suburban lifestyle in California to a new life, living in Japan. She dedicates 30 years of her life as a housewife, custodian and chatelaine of a 350yearold farmhouse in rural Japan. This astonishing book traces a circular path from were Rebecca began, to living under Japanese customs, from the basic day to day details of life in the house and village, through relationships with family, neighbors and the natural and supernatural entities with which the family shares the house.
"Anyone interested in knowing what it is like to become fully immersed in another culture--yet always as an outsider--will enjoy this thoughtful account immensely." --Library Journal
"Pungent with sounds, tastes, colors and village and family loreOtowa gives us a book of celebration, radiance, and renewal." --Japan Times
"A wonderful book about an old Japanese house, a resourceful American woman, and how they come together to honor the past and forge a bright future. What Frances Mayes did for Tuscany, Rebecca Otowa just might have done for the Japanese countryside. Bravo!" --Leza Lowitz, author of Green Tea to Go: Stories from Tokyo
Rebecca Otowa has lived in Japan for thirty years, leaving her original home in California in 1967, and her adopted home of Brisbane, Australia in 1978, to strike out in this new life direction. She and her husband Toshiro have raised two sons and now live in a rural area near Kyoto, in a 350-year-old farmhouse that has been in the family since its construction (or perhaps more accurately, the family has been in the house). As well as writing and teaching English, Rebecca loves growing vegetables and roses, reading (with one of her four cats on her lap), sewing, cooking, and voraciously watching English-language movies. Her social life is divided between local volunteer groups and "the stage"--music, amateur theatricals and country line dancing. Her happiest days are when her sons return home with their families, and everyone is together again.