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Gateway to Japan (Kodansha Guide) [Paperback]

June Kinoshita (Author), Nicholas Palevsky (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Kodansha Guide June 10, 1998
When friends want to know where to go in Japan, I always ask, "What are you interested in?" One friend spent every day at the Kabuki theater in Tokyo. Another ventured north to savor the culinary traditions of Tohoku. We know people who adore Tokyo, exulting in the energy of the world's most futuristic megapolis. Others loath it and flee to tranquil Kyoto, the former imperial city that epitomizes the refinement of traditional culture. Still others visit both cities and marvel at the extremes represented by these opposing poles of the Japanese experience. The diversity of cultural and geographic offerings can be intimidating. The two sections of this book, History and Culture and Japan by Region, are designed to make them more manageable. History and Culture focuses on specific topics and recommends where to go. Japan by Region gives the practical information you need to make the trip.

History and Culture
"A Brief History" introduces the major historical periods and includes a list of the most important figures in Japanese history and culture; their names appear in uppercase letters throughout the book. The chapters that follow provide both an overview and a practical reference on various subjects. For example, "Cuisine" contains bilingual "menus" from which you can order food in restaurants. Most of the chapters conclude with a list of recommendations. Any place that is mentioned in both the main text and the list appears in uppercase.

Japan by Region
The ten regional chapters appear in geographic order, from north to south (see map on p. vi). The largest of Japan's four main islands, Honshu, and the smallest, Shikoku, together make up seven chapters. The remaining three chapters are devoted to Hokkaido, Kyushu, and the Okinawan archipelago. Each chapter begins with a brief introduction and lists the best attractions, special interests, and seasonal events.

Transit Diagrams
The transit diagram at the beginning of each regional chapter shows the main trunk line (usually the bullet train) traversing the region, together with other train and bus lines that branch off. The main junctions on the trunk line are assigned roman numerals and treated as jumping-off points from which to explore side routes; the stations along the side routes are assigned arabic numerals. The text describes in numerical order each main junction, followed by the side routes; their direction is denoted by the letters "N" for north, "E" for east, and so forth. For example, suppose you want to visit Dewa Sanzan (transit key number IV:W3) in Tohoku. To see how to get there, turn to the Tohoku transit diagram (p.152); go down the trunk line to the fourth city, Sendai, then go west three notches. The text follows the same organization and is, in effect, a series of mini-itineraries.

Dining, Lodgings, and Local Maps
Dining and lodging facilities are listed at the end of each town or locale. Telephone area codes are usually listed beside the lodgings heading. Shops, restaurants, and hotels will appear on local maps according to a number-key system. (See inside front cover for a key to symbols.) Ratings are awarded on a scale of from one to three stars based on quality, service, and atmosphere. Credit-card information is supplied for every establishment for which the information was available.


Editorial Reviews

Review


"We've tried very hard to find something ... left out of their wide-ranging guide, but we've failed...." -Traveler's Bookstore


"It is the guide I wish I had to help me know what I was seeing. This is truly a comprehensive guide to read in advance, use during a trip, and to refer to back home." -The Explorers Journal


"... excellent bilingual maps.... If I could take only one guide with me, this would be the one." -Book World


"The fire and flavor of Japan pour from these pages...." -Knight-Ridder News Service


"Filled with history and pop culture, the book presents both the zany and the zen of Japan..." -Newsweek International Edition


"Even if you're not inclined to travel, get the book for the front essays on art, castles, history, matsuri, and my favorite chapter title: 'One-hour Japanese'" -Tokyo Journal


Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

[Here is the beginning of the section giving practical advice, preceded by a list of the topics to be taken up.]

PRACTICAL ADVICE

p. 3 Before You Go

Expenses, JNTO offices abroad, Reservations, Rail Pass, Tours, Required documents, Language, When to go, What to wear, Exercises, Packing, Money

p. 6 Getting Into and Out of Japan

By air, By sea

p. 8 Money

Changing money, Carry plenty of cash, Credit cards, Travelers checks

p. 8 Information in Japan

Tourist Information Centers (TIC), English-language newspapers and magazines, Prefectural information offices, Kanko annaijo

p. 10 Lodgings

Japanese (ryokan, minshuku, pensions, kokuminshukusha), Western (hotels, business hotels, chain hotels), Youth hostels, Temples, Cycling terminals, Reservations, In a pinch

p. 13 Transportation Inside Japan

JR (Japan Railways), Buses and scheduled tour buses, Jikokuhyo timetables, Domestic airlines, Taxis, Driving, Car rental, Hitchhiking

p. 15 Practical Information A to Z

Addresses, Banks, Baths, Business hours, Business travel, Children, Crime, Embassies and consulates, Emergencies, English, Etiquette, Footwear, Gift-giving, Handicapped travelers, Health, Hospitals, Immigration, Lost-and-found, National holidays, Parcel delivery, Postal system, Shopping, Taxes, Telephone and telegraph, Time zone, Tipping, Toilet, Travel agents, Weights and measures, Women travelers, Voltage

Before You Go

There's no better way to get to know a country than to make your own travel arrangements. Japan, with perhaps the most varied culture in the world today, presents astounding and delightful choices: whether to stay in a temple or a computer-controlled hotel room, to see Noh or Buto, to dine on nouvelle Japonaise or slurp noodles in a 500-year-old shop. Expenses. With the rise of the mighty yen, Japan has undoubtedly become an expensive travel destination. It is not necessary to impoverish yourself, however. If you are willing to rely on the superb public transportation system and to try the accommodations and restaurants that the average Japanese themselves use, you will be able to stretch your budget considerably further than if you were to stick to international hotels and fancy French restaurants. What's more, you will have a much more interesting experience. Minshuku, which are Japanese-style "bed-and-breakfasts," cost about $60 to $90 including dinner and breakfast and will give you an opportunity to see how ordinary people live. Food can be shockingly expensive, but it is possible to dine cheaply. Commuter railway stations and shopping districts abound with inexpensive restaurants where you can get a nourishing meal for about $10. The huge food marts in department store basements sell beautiful and inexpensive bento (lunch boxes), perfect for picnics or for taking back to your room. Restaurant lunch specials are often a bargain. Railway travel in Japan operates with clockwork efficiency, but it is expensive. Sometimes it is cheaper to fly--especially if you count in the time savings. Note that during peak vacation periods (Mar. 21-Apr. 15, Apr. 28-May 6, July 21-Aug. 31, Dec. 25-Jan. 10) JR and many hotels charge higher rates. The Japan Rail Pass can be a money saver depending on your itinerary. A one-week pass costs about the same as the round-trip bullet-train fare from Tokyo to Kyoto. Here are two entirely realistic possibilities for daily expenses:....


Product Details

  • Paperback: 808 pages
  • Publisher: Kodansha USA; 3 edition (June 10, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 477002018X
  • ISBN-13: 978-4770020185
  • Product Dimensions: 7.4 x 5 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #952,082 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

June Kinoshita is co-founder of Hanoa Productions, a firm that specializes in editorial content production, project management, social media marketing and strategic consulting in biomedicine and music. June was the co-founder and Executive Editor of the Alzheimer Research Forum ("Alzforum"), where she built and managed a multidisciplinary team of editors, writers, knowledge engineers, software developers, database designers and data curators to create the pre-eminent web-based scientific resource and online community in biomedicine.

As an entrepreneur, June co-founded and serves as Chief Marketing Officer of SociaLife, a start-up in healthcare social networks. She is also Chief Strategy Officer for fanatic.fm, a web-based music platform. Previously, she co-founded and served as Chief Information Officer of N-of-One, Inc., an innovative personalized oncology company. She actively blogs for Socialife and Opera of the Future and runs social media strategy over Facebook and Twitter for various organizations.

June is a member of the advisory council of the M.I.T.-Harvard Medical School Division of Health Sciences and Technology; an advisory board member for the Center for Cognitive Fitness and Innovative Therapies in Santa Barbara; and is a founding board member of the Foundation for Alzheimer's and Cultural Memory. She was co-principal investigator with the Massachusetts General Hospital center for interdisciplinary informatics on SWAN (Semantic Web Applications in Neuromedicine) and has served on the scientific advisory boards of the Telemakus Biomarkers Project, Schizophrenia Research Forum.

As a journalist, June has published hundreds of articles for such national publications as the New York Times Magazine, Allure, American Health, New York Times Book Review, Technology Review, Longevity and Newsweek. She was also Science Consultant on the nationally televised series on women in science, "Discovering Women," produced by WGBH in Boston, and was Program Developer and Science Editor for "The Secret Life of the Brain," a five-part film on neuroscience, co-produced by David Grubin Productions and WNET in New York City (2002), and for "The Forgetting," a nationally broadcast PBS film on Alzheimer's Disease (2004).

June served on the editorial board of Scientific American magazine, where she specialized in the neurosciences and physics. She became the first staff editor to publish a full-length article in the magazine, a report on the Voyager II fly-by of Neptune from mission control at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. June has been a consulting editor to the journal Science, where she spearheaded the journal's coverage of scientific research and biotechnology in Asia, and produced several landmark issues on science in Japan, China and the Asian "Tigers."

June graduated from Harvard College in 1980, where she concentrated in physics. She is the recipient of the M.I.T. Knight Science Journalism Fellowship, an award of excellence by the American Medical Writer's Association, and Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory's science writing fellowship. She received the 2006 American Aging Association's Excellence in Journalism award for her role in creating the Alzheimer Research Forum. Her work has been featured on NBC's Today Show, NPR and Oprah. June is the author of an acclaimed guidebook, Gateway to Japan (Kodansha International, 1990, 1993, 1998), and was a consultant for the feature film, Black Rain, directed by Ridley Scott and starring Michael Douglas.

 

Customer Reviews

30 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (30 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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67 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The greatest, January 19, 2003
This review is from: Gateway to Japan (Kodansha Guide) (Paperback)
Having lived in Japan for the past 6 years, I've had the opportunity to use all of the major guidebooks (and quite a few of the minor ones as well), and without a doubt, the most useful and informative guidebook is this one. Of course Lonely Planet has lots of information about restaurants and hotels, but you can get the tourist information center to help you with hotels and wherever you walk you can find plenty of nice restaurants. What you really want is a purpose to visit the places that you are visiting. Lonely Planet just tells you what things are, but this guidebooks tells you the history of each place, so you can understand why each place is important. If you're looking for a guidebook to tell you where the clubs, hangouts, and youth hostels are, then maybe this isn't the book you're looking for. However, if you're looking for a nice meaty book to feed you mind on, this is it.
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38 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Just about the best guide to Japan available., July 29, 1998
This review is from: Gateway to Japan (Kodansha Guide) (Paperback)
This is my favourite guidebook to Japan. It's pretty chunky, and the shape is a little odd (Why so tall and thin?) but the information in here is just about the best you'll find. These two really love their subject and really love telling stories, too. Every time they describe a temple or shrine they try to give some interesting historical information about it. They also devote over a hundred pages at the beginning of the book to the history and culture of Japan. If that sounds like overkill, don't worry, it's all broken down into reader-friendly chunks, a page or two at a time. In the second part of the book, a region by region guide, they give plenty of suggestions for possible walks/half-day/full-day tours, etc. These are good for helping you plan out your trip in advance - no point in arriving and finding out that the place is three times the size you thought it was! Furthermore, the info. and maps are excellent. None of the scr! ibbled-out-on-napkin stuff here, we are talking graphic shading, altitude-showing, super-imposed-lay-out-displaying map-a-rama - OH BABY! LET'S KIOSK! Er...yes...well, the only possible bad things I can think of to say about this guide book is that the section on the whole of Japan north of Tokyo is a bit skinny, and it doesn't categorize the accomodation sections quite as clearly as, say, the Lonely Planet (see below). But that is a very minor point - overall, their accomodation info. is still just as extensive as any other guide.
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27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Indispensable Guide to Japan, November 12, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Gateway to Japan (Kodansha Guide) (Paperback)
I first used this guide when I lived in Japan, and I quickly realized it was the best guidebook I'd ever had. It is unbelievably detailed and informative. You can learn a tremendous amount about the culture, history, and people of Japan before you even step off the plane. You'll want to take this book, for example, when visiting the temples, since it provides a thorough exposition of their architecture and symbolism. What I like especially about this guide, however, is the fact that it's not just one in a series. Rather, it's the product of two people who really know and love Japan, and it shows in the quality of their writing and the depth of the coverage. I can't recommend it highly enough!

By the way, one reviewer lamented the odd size of this book, but rest assured, this 1998 version is more compact and portable than previous editions.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Japan underwent three distinct cultural transformations during its prehistoric era (ca. 100,000 B.C.-A.D. 538). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
line limited express, architecturally preserved zone, economical inn group, fine ryokan, tea arbor, foot from the station, onsen town, bus from station, bus from the station, cycling terminal, old kura, main line express, hall enshrines, samurai quarter, former castle town, onsen bath, mythical first emperor, imperial abbot, shoin architecture, samurai houses, soba shop, treasure hall, tutelary shrine, junction for buses, folk performing arts
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Meiji Restoration, World War, Great Buddha, Calendar Jan, Kyoto History, Dewa Sanzan, Japan Sea, Washington Hotel, Pure Land, Esoteric Buddhism, Hiraizumi History, Izumo Taisha, Kasuga Taisha, Tokyo National Museum, Asakusa Kannon, Golden Pavilion, Itsukushima Jinja, Silver Pavilion, Esoteric Buddhist, Izu Peninsula, Rinzai Zen, Calendar Apr, Kei School, Lake Biwa, Nishi Hongan-ji
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