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Archive for August, 2009

The dial on the hype machine goes up to eleven!

Here’s a neat interview with me about Haikasoru’s launch and some future plans, plus the differences between Japanese and English-language SF! Check it out.

The British magazine SFX is running reviews this month of All You Need Is Kill and The Lord of the Sands of Time in their print edition. Andrew Osmond writes in part:

Kill “is tremendously enjoyable, evoking not only Groundhog Day but also Ken Grimwood’s classic book, Replay, and the classic anime The Girl Who Leapt Through Time.

Lord has a “fabulous, borderline batty concept, with some wonderful wrinkles along the way” including references to the poet Robert Burns. “Now that’s something we never expected to see in a Japanese SF novel.”

Gene van Troyer 1950-2009

Anyone familiar with Japanese SF in the English-speaking world has heard of Gene van Troyer. He first moved to Japan as an exchange student in the 1970s, and soon became a major part of the SF scene there, working as a translation consultant for many top Japanese SF writers, and as a reviewer for SF Magazine where he covered the English-language beat.

With Grania Davis, van Troyer edited Speculative Japan: Outstanding Tales of Japanese Science Fiction and Fantasy, an impressive anthology of short Japanese SF in English. A second volume has been announced for 2010.

When Haikasoru was announced, he and Grania both expressed great enthusiasm for the project. We had heard of his health issues, but were surprised and saddened to hear of his death by cancer yesterday. We’d like to extend our condolences to wife Tomoko, his sons Makato and Akito, his daughter Miika, and to all his friends and readers.

My boss went to Japan and all I got was this AWESOME toilet paper!

Hey all. Sorry for the lack of updates here, but we’ve been on vacation. Everyone here at the High Castle had a week off. Now that we’re back, I can show off the present I received from my boss in Japan!

Jeeeeeeeeeeeaaaalooooous?

Yeah, you’re jealous. Behold, my very own copy of Drop, the Koji Suzuki novella printed on toilet tissue. Like all things Japanese, it comes with instructions:


It’s like I always say, “Overhand forever! Underhand never!”

Drop isn’t just a random story on tp; it takes place in a public toilet. So the reading experience–the novella takes up up three feet of the length of the roll and is multiply repeated–is sort of like, oh I dunno, watching Titanic while on a cruise or something.

And of course, the cover has all the usual stuff one would expect from a book such as an author pic and a small ad for the next title.


Looks like Mr. Suzuki’s next book is something called Edge. It’s unclear to me whether it will be released in hardcover, as a bunkobon paperback, or as toilet paper.

So, what did you all do on your summer vacations?

It’s a Small World After All

artofponyo1

Hayao Miyazaki’s latest film opened in U.S. theaters this past weekend. In Japan it’s called Ponyo on the Cliff by the Sea. But here in the States, the title’s been shortened to one snappy, easy to remember word: Ponyo. Miyazaki has taken the Little Mermaid fable, removed all the religious subtext, inserted an ecological agenda, and moved the action to the Japanese coastline. Here’s my four-word review: My daughter loved it!

Gentleman Jim Hubbert has been translating for Studio Ghibli since 2001. He’s the guy responsible for the dubbing scripts of every Ghibli film except Grave of the Fireflies and Kiki’s Delivery Service. In other words, he did the translation and localization of Ponyo from Japanese to English. Good job, Jim! Here’s his review of the movie: “It’s a deceptively simple film, but it has as much depth as anything Miyazaki has ever done.”

The reason why this excites me so much is because Jim Hubbert also translated the novel, The Lord of the Sands of Time. When I saw his name pop up at the end of Ponyo’s credits, it brought a big smile to my face. We really do live in a small world.


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