Genre:
Travel Memoir
Description:
A
diary of travel through Japan.
Author:
“Patrick
Colgan was born in Bologna, Italy, in 1978, of an Italian mother and
British father. He began traveling fifteen years ago with an
InterRail pass and never stopped since. He has been in almost forty
countries and all five continents but he loves going back to Japan,
where he has been (so far) seven times. When he is not travelling
around the world he is a Journalist at the daily newspaper Il
Resto del Carlino. He has
been writing his travel blog Orizzonti
for years, in Italian. He has recently started a blog in English
too.”
For
more, visit Mr Colgan's blog.
Appraisal:
As a
thirty-year resident of Japan, I found Patrick Colgan's diary of his
travels in the country in parts entertaining and off putting. His
depiction of Tokyo as a living organism fed by arteries of train
lines is an evocative description of the city. However, there is far
too much "WOW" throughout the book even for a casual reader
or visitor.
"This
streamlined metal box that when arriving at a station seems always on
the verge of rising up, detaching from the track and transforming
itself into a giant robot, is able to cancel space and make distances
imperceptible."
He's
talking about the Shinkansen bullet train. When Japan first developed
high-speed rail it was a technological wonder. Today, France's TGV
operates across Europe, including the author's native Italy, and it
rivals JR Central in bids for foreign construction contracts. Colgan
also calls the Shinkansen the pride of Japan Railways. There is no
Japan Railways. It was broken up and privatized years ago.
He
devotes a long section to food, but curiously restricts his comments
to ramen and a food critic's favorite restaurant, which apparently is
a Chinese fast food joint. Colgan's point that Japanese are
meticulous in preparation of even mundane fare is well taken.
However, he shortchanges the reader. Tokyo has more Michelin-starred
restaurants than any other city in the world, and they represent
globe-spanning ethnicities.
There
is this befuddling line:
"The
queues, sometimes as long as 100 metres, can be seen stretching
around Omotesando or Ginza at lunch time…"
Really?
I have seen lines as long as maybe twenty meters.
This
passage is simply wrong.
"…property
development, which reached its climax with the speculation bubble of
the eighties that left ruins behind it. I say 'ruins' just as a
manner of speaking, as the ugly buildings with an average age of 25
or 30 years are all still standing, silent witnesses of that spell of
unreasonable optimism and presumption."
Development
took off after
prices dropped at the collapse of the asset bubble in 1990. Tokyo has
been transformed over the past decade or two with, to my eye,
wonderfully creative architecture from Shiodome, to Roppongi Hills,
to even the hokey Venus Fort in Odaiba.
And
this further comment on perceived malaise:
"What
happened after the nineties is remembered as 'the lost decade' but
maybe the period should be called the lost twenty, or thirty years.
The country, the people - the numbers are saying it, and so is the
present prime minister Abe’s extreme economic policy — haven’t
yet recovered."
The
so-called three arrows of "Abenomics," fiscal stimulus,
monetary easing and structural reforms have largely been successful.
Goldman Sachs Vice Chairwoman Kathy Matsui notes Japan has been the
best performing major stock market since 2013, and she expects
further advance in 2016 with double-digit growth in earnings. The
Bank of Japan's adoption of quantitative easing, that is monetization
of debt, was considered radical at the time, but it wasn't long
before it was adopted by the Federal Reserve, which is now abandoning
the practice. Japan's GDP growth has trailed that of the U.S. and
E.U., but its unemployment rate of 3.6 percent compares with 6.2
percent for the U.S. and double digits in much of the E.U., according
to the CIA World Factbook.
Many
of Colgan's attempts at picturesque imagery struck me as tortured.
"…there
is also a big glass-and-cement box. It’s grey, but it has azure
stripes running through its facade reflecting the sky. It is
suspended six, seven metres above ground. I already know what it
contains, because it’s the third time that I have come, and maybe
this is the reason I can’t stop looking at it."
He is
describing the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, which is built on
pillars.
In a
hiking trip in Hokkaido, the author has this to say about bears:
"The
Asian black bear living in these valleys is no grizzly, but can be up
to two and a half metres tall when standing, and if it has cubs with
it, it can become aggressive: it’s their nature."
There
is no mention of brown bears.
Although
they are dangerous animals, Japan's black bears, tsukinowaguma,
don't get nearly that big. Hokkaido's brown bears, higuma,
do stand that tall, and they are, in fact, related to grizzlies. I
don't see how one can write about a bear-watching trip in Hokkaido
without noting the two species.
To me
the most interesting passages described trips to islands south of
Okinawa, but perhaps that's because I haven't been there.
FYI:
Except
for a two-year stint as a communications specialist at McKinsey &
Co., my time in Japan has been spent as a financial journalist for
Bloomberg and before that Nikkei. I am now retired and live in
Yokohama.
Format/Typo
Issues:
No
significant issues.
Rating:
** Two Stars
Reviewed
by: Sam Waite
Approximate
word count:
20-25,000 words
3 comments:
First of all, I have to thank you for taking the time to read and review my book. Sometimes you learn more from criticism than praise and I did learn from both reviews.
I won't address all the points in mr. Waite's review as I don't want this comment to become extremely long. And I want to stress that I respect mr. Waite's wide experience and knowledge of the subject, clearly much wider than mine. I would just like to clarify some points.
I will also admit straight away that he got me on a factual error:
obviously the reference to the black bear is a mistake, and I meant the brown bear. I will correct it straight away and I thank you for pointing it out.
As for the other points:
-Describing Tokyo as a wasteland or a desert is obviously a very personal view as the city has some extraordinary architecture among, I believe, a vast majority of shabby, unappealing or simply ugly buildings, many of them built in the eighties (and earlier).
The ugliness of Japanese cities, including large parts of Tokyo, is an aspect often remarked upon by European travellers, probably influenced by the fact that they often come from cities with a very coherent architecture (such as Fosco Maraini in his classic 'Meeting Japan'). It could be my background that lead me to insist on this point.
I wasn't a witness like mr. Waite of what happened during the late eighties. What I wrote was mostly based on research and talks with Tokyo residents.
I will quote two of the books I have read and that I used for my research.
In 'Tokyo Underworld' Robert Whiting for instance writes
"The bubble economy of the Eighties, with its sudden jump in real estate prices, just made things worse, for it gave rise to a new mob activity called jiage, the business of persuading recalcitrant owners to sell property so that the mob could consolidate it and sell it for the construction of million-dollar office blocks"
Francesco Gatti in his History of Contemporary Japan (published in Italian, this quote translated by me) writes
"The dramatic increase in the price and the pressure of demand for housing encouraged the whole (construction) sector, dominated by six business giants. These, during the eighties and nineties, also benefited massive investments by the industry public, responsible for extensive overbuilding in both major urban centers and rural areas "
-The Shinkansen. I believe it's still a train very different from any other I have seen and it can't be compared with the Tgv or the Eurostar but rather to its Chinese counterparts, in my opinion. It still surprises foreign travellers for its unique looks, its reliability, its speed, and I might add its boarding process.
-I didn't mean to write an essay on Japan and this is why I decided to focus on some aspects that I found more revealing than others. Humble ramen for instance rather than the well known abundance of starred restaurants in Tokyo which aren't accessible to the typical traveller and weren't accessible to me.
-As for the queues I might have been wrong by ten or fifteen metres as I didn't actually measure them, but I guarantee that I did witness extremely long queues in Omotesando, in particular for a popcorn shop (it moved faster than the typical restaurant queue).
I didn't take pictures or don't have any proof of it. But I did found some on the Internet. Obviously queues like these are exceptional but do form, sometimes
http://www.japantoday.com/category/picture-of-the-day/view/popcorn-line
But if some of these points weren't clear or well substantiated in the book, it was all my fault.
thank you again and best regards!
p.s. i deleted and reposted the comment just to correct a few typos as there wasn't any opition to edit it
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