Easy Life in Kamusari

, #1

206 pages

English language

Published Sept. 27, 2021 by Amazon Publishing.

ISBN:
978-1-5420-2715-1
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4 stars (2 reviews)

Yuki Hirano is just out of high school when his parents enroll him, against his will, in a forestry training program in the remote mountain village of Kamusari. No phone, no internet, no shopping. Just a small, inviting community where the most common expression is “take it easy.”

At first, Yuki is exhausted, fumbles with the tools, asks silly questions, and feels like an outcast. Kamusari is the last place a city boy from Yokohama wants to spend a year of his life. But as resistant as he might be, the scent of the cedars and the staggering beauty of the region have a pull.

Yuki learns to fell trees and plant saplings. He begins to embrace local festivals, he’s mesmerized by legends of the mountain, and he might be falling in love. In learning to respect the forest on Mt. Kamusari for its majestic qualities and its inexplicable secrets, …

3 editions

get a lungful of mountain air

4 stars

Back in 2017 when I was still a very new and fresh library volunteer making new and fresh library volunteer mistakes, I remember having a conversation with the then-Technician in charge of the library about favorite books (hi Julianne!). Maybe I asked naively “what’s your favorite book?” not realizing how hard a question that was to answer, I really don’t remember. What I do recall from the conversation was her recommending Shion Miura’s The Great Passage with a lot of caveats about it being a book about writing a dictionary and how it doesn’t sound interesting at all, but was actually a good book. I dutifully noted it down (I remember wanting to branch out on my reading interests, because at the time I was reading basically just fantasy, and not a lot of it at that), and picked it up during the next Kindle sale. It was delightful. …

The Easy Life in Kamusari, by Shion Miura

3 stars

What do you do with an adult son who has no ambitions and no motivation? Well, if you’re Yuki Hirano’s parents, you volunteer your son for forestry work in a remote corner of Honshu. The Easy Life in Kamusari, by Shion Miura, contains Yuki’s story of his first year in Kamusari, learning to tend its forests, and finally figuring out how to pull his own weight instead of drifting through life. This might sound like an ordinary bildungsroman and it would be, except that Kamusari is so remote that it might be one of the few places in Japan where the gods still roam...

Read the rest of my review at abookishtype.wordpress.com/

Subjects

  • Fiction
  • Forestry
  • Japan
  • Mountains
  • Gods