Apr 25

JET alum heads Writopia Lab, creative writing nonprofit in D.C.

This just in from JETAA DC:

Hi fellow JET alums,

I’ve just gotten a job as the DC director of a creative writing nonprofit called Writopia Lab (www.Writopialab.org/writopia-washington-dc.html) which holds writing workshops for kids and teens.  The organization is based in NYC and is brand new to this area, so I’m trying to spread the word about summer workshops. I know that many of you are involved in schools and arts/education organizations, so if you know of lists/folks to pass this info onto, could you please do so?  And let me know?  I really appreciate any help you can give, as well as any advice for spreading this great organization to Washington!  (Contacts at schools / local publications especially appreciated!)

Thanks so much!
Kathy Crutcher (Gifu ’00-’01) Read More


Apr 24

JETAA Chicago Newsletter article on James Kennedy

Finally got a hold of this nice article from the Spring 2009 Issue of the JETAA Chicago Newsletter about Jamese Kennedy (Nara-ken, 2004-06) written by JETAA Chicago Newsletter Editor Elizabeth Friedman (Shimane-ken, 2003-04).

Local Chicago JET Alum Spotlight: James Kennedy

James Kennedy (Nara-ken, 2004-2006), a Chicago resident, is the author of The Order of Odd Fish, a  2008 Smithsonian Notable book for children. I recently attended a reading he did of the book at the Evanston Public Library’s Fantasy Festival. Children and adults alike giggled as James bounced around the room while emulating his various characters’ voices and mannerisms. James mentioned he has taken improvisational theater classes in Chicago, which was evident in his ability to keep the group entertained and engrossed in the fantastical story. James also talked about how his improv classes were beneficial in getting him through the JET program interview; he had no problem acting out a sample English lesson on the spot in front of strangers.

In “The Order of Odd Fish,” James’ language often soars to dizzying heights, built upon his silliness and brilliant sense of humor.  Each sentence seems to compete with the next to be the most surreal and outrageous piece of writing possible. The book’s dust jacket states that “The Order of Odd Fish” is “equal parts Monty Python and Roald Dahl ….” and I think that comparison is spot on. “The Order of Odd Fish” brought back fond childhood memories of reading “The Witches” and listening to the silly banter of Monty Python.

The main character of the novel, Jo, enters a strange land full of Read More


Apr 22

NYTimes Book Reviews: Manga and Creative Writing

Thanks to JETAA Pacific Northwest alum David Kowalsky for sharing the following two JetWit-relevant book reviews from the NY Times:


Apr 22

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Author Suzanne Kamata (Tokushima-ken, 1988-90), who serves as the publicity assistant for the Tokyo branch of The Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, shared the following announcement:

The Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators presents

Literary Agent Laura Rennert

Under the Hood: The Nuts and Bolts of Craft

Time: Friday, May 15, 2009, 6:30 – 8:30 p.m.

Place: Tokyo Women’s Plaza, Conference Room 1

5-53-67 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo

(by the Children’s Castle and United Nations University)

For a map see www.scbwi.jp/map.htm

Fee: SCBWI members 1,500 yen; non-members 2,000 yen

This event will be in English.

In this two hour presentation, Laura Rennert, senior agent of Andrea Brown Literary Agency, will lift the hood and focus on the key elements of the writer’s craft: voice, great beginnings, characterization, narrative structure, plot, powerful endings. How do you establish your compact with the reader and then honor it? What makes opening pages irresistible and how do you sustain these page turning elements throughout your work? What causes an agent, an editor, or a reader to put down a book? If voice is that ineffable something you bring to the table, are there concrete ways in which you can work on it? What are the essential elements that go into the creation of “round” characters, and how can you create these multi-dimensional, vivid characters?

Come to this hands-on session and plumb these questions and others as Rennert delves into issues of craft and technique, drawing on her ten years plus experience as an agent, on her Ph.D. and eight years of university experience teaching English Literature, and her own experience as an agent with forthcoming published books.

Laura Rennert is a Senior Agent with Andrea Brown Literary Agency. Founded in New York City in 1981, it was the first literary agency to represent both children’s book authors and illustrators. Rennert has been with the agency for almost ten years, and specializes in all categories of children’s books, from picture books to young adult, graphic novels, fiction and nonfiction. Visit the Andrea Brown agency website at www.andreabrownlit.com.

www.scbwi.jp info@scbwi.jp


Apr 21

New JET alum blog – Japandra

I just found out about another JET alum blog, this one at japandra.blogspot.com by a woman named Sandra (Miyazaki-ken, 1997-99) who worked in media in NY for a few years and now is back n Tokyo still in the media biz.

My favorite line so far is from her post “Do Over” where she attends a Yakult Swallows game and comments:

Maybe you know something about how Japanese baseball fans coordinate and organize. They make honeybees look sloppy.

Definitely a blog worth following.


Apr 20

This past Saturday we held the first-ever JET Alumni Blog Workshop where we invited JET alums to gather and learn how to set up, use and take advantage of blogs.  This was my first activity in my new JETAA NY role as Professional Outreach & Development Chair and it turned out to be both productive and a lot of fun.

  • The goal was to help JET alums develop skills that will be beneficial in furthering their careers, whether they want to be independent writers, promote their services and abilities or perhaps just be one of the few people in their company who knows how to use blogs effectively (or at all).
  • Location: JETAA NY webmaster Lee-Sean Huang‘s apartment building in the Financial District in Lower Manhattan, which has wi-fi in its library.  Two JET alums joined:  Randall, who had never used a blog before, and Anton, who is familiar with blogs but was seeking structure for his writing energies and was interested in learning some of the techniques for effectively using a blog and increasing traffic.  Rather than a formal class-style lecture, we just sat around with our laptops (3 laptops for 4 people), demonstrated the basics of blogs and then looked over Randall’s shoulder as he set up his first-ever blog.  With Anton we discussed using RSS feeds to follow other blogs as well as possible writing topics and ways to contribute to JetWit.com.
  • Next JET Alumni Blog Workshop:  Probably on a weeknight in the near future, most likely in midtown at a cafe or other space that has wi-fi.  Stay tuned for more information.  If you’re interested and you have not already been in touch, just send an e-mail to professional at jetaany dot org and I’ll add you to the list.
  • Lastly, I encourage other JETAA chapters to try setting up blog workshops as well.  In addition to helping JET alums learn new skills, it was also nice to get together, learn about what each of us was doing and exchange info in a constructive way.  In the current economy it’s more important than ever for JET alums to help each other out, and this is just one small way among many to do that.

Apr 19

Just found out about another JET alum author out there in the JETAA-sphere…

Suzanne (Borsum) Kamata (Tokushima, 1988-90) is the author of the novel Losing Kei (Leapfrog Press, 2008), a picture book, Playing for Papa (Topka Books, 2008) and the editor of three anthologies – Call Me Okaasan: Adventures in Multicultural Mothering (Wyatt-Mackenzie Publishing, 2009), Love You to Pieces: Creative Writers on Raising a Child with Special Needs (Beacon Press, 2008) and The Broken Bridge: Fiction from Expatriates in Literary Japan (Stone Bridge Press, 1997). Her articles, essays, and short stories have appeared in over 100 publications, and have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize five times. She is also the 2008 recipient of the SCBWI Magazine Merit Award for Fiction. She is currently fiction editor of literarymama.com, and provides manuscript critiques on a freelance basis.


Apr 9

Kirsten’s World: The 2007 Niigata Earthquake

By Kirsten Phillips (Niigata-ken, 2005-08)

Through dangers untold and hardships unnumbered…

A newly arrived ingénue sits on the 2nd floor of a local coffee dive in her adopted 田舎 dwelling. Birds are chirping. Squid is drying. All seems right with the universe.

Without warning, the earth trembles.

Delicately ejecting the coffee just inhaled a mere moment ago, our ingénue dives Bruce Willis style under the nearest table, taking out an entire shelf of neatly-stacked, carefully-categorized dog-earedまんが.

Her Japanese companion raises an eyebrow. She hasn’t even put down her cup.
“Uh…大丈夫?”

“No!” Ingenue blurts, biting down on a freshly polished nail to stay the hysteria. “This is it! Doomsday! The roof’s gonna cave, we’re all gonna perish-”

“ええじゃん? A little one like this?…” The owner, a puckish man named Kurochan, laughs as his establishment sways to and fro.

That was my first earthquake ever. Read More


Apr 8

By Kirsten Phillips (Niigata-ken, 2005-08)

Japan is known to the world at large for its countless and enduring cultural contributions from the over-appreciated 茶の湯 to the oft overlooked (but sorely missed) heated toilet seat. However, there is one thing I’d like to scrawl into every guide book; one nuance of Japan that I’d like forever engraved in the minds of curious tourists: Excess noise.

What exactly is meant by excess noise?

It’s not something one cannot become desensitized to in time. But it is yet another reminder you are no longer in Kansas.

いっらしゃいませ!For the timid/under-informed, this customary holler of welcome and professional integrity is as intimidating as a car honk. Haplessly wander into any establishment in Japan and you will have to grow accustomed to multiple people welcoming you with bellowing. At least you know you’ve got their attention? But I’ve heard some dudes get creative with their shouting. Almost made me want to inch away from all that tempting スルメ they were peddling。

Let’s not even get into election time, shall we? Oh man, oh man.

Jingles. It seems like everything in Japan from coal to second hand stores has a mind-numbing jingle to it. I bet they even have a jingle for jingles! Augh! I pitied the dudes who had to work at Off House the recycling center. I have witnessed the slack jaws and desperate gazes of Disney employees trapped in their kiosks and made to listen to the Pocahontas soundtrack on an endless loop. So, too, was the fate of the Off House worker. But the fun did not stop there. Oh no.

“Why is the food singing at me?” I wondered aloud as I stared at the onigiri. Read More


Apr 8

Writers: Useful upcoming events from SWET (Tokyo)

Via the Society for Writers Editors and Translators (SWET) e-mail list.  Several workshops/discussions/presentations that seem to be very useful for writers and translators in Japan:

SWET News, April 8, 2009

For details on the following upcoming events, see below:

1) April 21 (Tues)–SWET OPEN FORUM: Wordsmithing in Japan (Tokyo)

2) May 16 (Sat)– WRITING MULTICULTURAL FAMILIES (Tokyo)

3) May 17 (Sun)–SWET KANSAI: THREE POETS IN JAPAN (Kyoto)

4) June 23 (Tues)–WRITING NEWS ON JAPAN with Elaine Lies (Tokyo)

5) July 18 (Sat)–SWET (Kanto) Summer Party – details pending. Read More


Apr 8

Donald Keene Center presents: Royall Tyler – The Honor of Translating the Tale of Genji

Via Kia Cheleen (CIR, Aichi-ken 1996-98, ALT 1998-1999), Associate Director at the Donald Keene Center on Japanese Culture at Columbia University.  To get on their e-mail list for future events, send an e-mail to donald-keene-center at columbia dot edu.

2009 Annual Soshitsu Sen XV Distinguished Lecture on Japanese Culture

“The Honor of Translating the Tale of Genji”

Royall Tyler

6:00 PM, Wednesday, April 22nd

The 2008-2009 academic year marks the one-thousandth anniversary of that remarkable classic of Japanese literature, Murasaki Shikibu’s The Tale of Genji. In order to commemorate the occasion, the Keene Center has invited the renowned Genji scholar and most recent translator of that work into English, Dr. Royall Tyler, to deliver this year’s Soshitsu Sen XV Distinguished Lecture on Japanese Culture.

Miller Theater, Columbia University (116th Street and Broadway)
Please go to http://www.columbia.edu/about_columbia/map/miller_theater.html for a campus map

Reservations are required by April 15th. To RSVP for a reservation-only event,
please email dcc2119 at columbia dot edu or send a fax to 212-854-4019. Read More


Apr 7

Recent publications by JET alum Michael Auslin

Two recent publications by JET alum Michael Auslin, a professor of Japanese history and politics and currently the Director of Japanese Studies for the American Enterprise Institute in D.C.

The Sick Man of Asia
Posted Date: Monday, April 6, 2009
It might not be possible for Tokyo to maintain the type of global role it has played so far.  If that happens, the world may finally understand just how vital that role was.  http://www.aei.org/publication29667

Can Japan Thrive–or Survive?

Posted Date: Monday, April 6, 2009
Despite its political sclerosis, economic stagnation, and demographic worries, Japan is a resilient nation that has much to contribute to the world.  http://www.aei.org/publication29666

Michael will also be moderating a panel on Tuesday, April 14 at the AEI offices in Washington, D.C. on the topic of “Are Alliances Enough: The Role of the U.S.-Japanese Alliance in Maritime Asia.”   The panel is part of an all-day conference titled Protecting the Seas:  Maritime Security in the Asia Pacific, America’s Interests, and Asia’s Future.


Apr 7

Zorgamazoo on the shortlist for 2009 E.B. White Read Aloud Award

EB White Read Aloud AwardRobert Weston’s (Nara-ken, 2002-04) rhyming novel Zorgamazoo has just received another honor.  Below is the post by Rob on his blog wayofthewest.wordpress.com:


Unbelievable. My little black book simply won’t stop slapping me in the face with the most pleasant of surprises.

GET THIS: Zorgamazoo is on the shortlist for the 2009 E.B. White Read Aloud Award. And here’s what I have to say about it:

EEEEEEEEEEGAD!

(ahem. )

Now then. What this means: E.B. White, as I’m certain you already know, is the author of Charlotte’s Web and Stuart Little (he’s also the eponymous “White” of Strunk and White’s Elements of Style).

(CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF ROB’S POST)


Apr 7

Co-working links

The following links are from the article on co-working by freelance translator Joel Dechant (CIR Fukuoka-ken, 2001-04).


Apr 7

Joel Dechant (CIR Fukuoka-ken, 2001-04), freelance translator based in Fukuoka, has been exploring the “co-working” trend.  If interested in discussing with him, click on his name to contact him via LinkedIn or post a comment below to share your thoughts or perspectives.

After 3 years on JET I worked at a private Japanese university as a translator for 3 years. It was essentially a JET-type job: translate, interpret, assist foreign students and/or plan programs for 3 years and then you’re out. After their stints were up, some of my other colleagues went home or elsewhere in Japan to work in universities, government agencies or in the private sector, but I-on the other hand-decided to stay.

“What about my contract?” you ask. Well, my employer and I struck a deal. They needed someone who knew the university and who could translate and interpret well, and I wanted to stay in the area. By virtue of being placed in the position that bore the biggest share of translation and interpreting work, I was able to hone my skills well enough to confidently say, “Hey, I can do this!” So we wrote a new contract in which they would outsource their work to me. With the stroke of a pen, I was self-employed.

It was like a dream come true. How many times had I Read More


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