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One Month in Tohoku Caroline Pover

One Month in Tohoku von Caroline Pover

One Month in Tohoku Caroline Pover


€6.19
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Zusammenfassung

The decade-long story of the author's friendship with a remote community of samurai descendants. This is an uplifting story that makes readers cry tears of laughter as well as sorrow, and reassures us that there is love and laughter in the midst of chaos and uncertainty, and restores your faith in humanity during difficult times.

One Month in Tohoku Zusammenfassung

One Month in Tohoku: An Englishwoman's memoir on life after the Japanese tsunami Caroline Pover

On March 11, 2011, one of the biggest earthquakes in history occurred off the northeast coast of Japan, triggering a deadly tsunami that destroyed much of the Tohoku coastline. Driven by a desire to help the people of Tohoku, long-time Tokyo resident Caroline Pover embarked on a mission to collect emergency supplies from her native UK. Caroline delivered these supplies to an isolated part of Japan that even many Japanese have never heard of: the Oshika Peninsula. While there, she saw beyond the horror of the debris and destruction, and fell in love with the beauty of the landscape and the spirit of the people who had called the peninsula home for hundreds of years since their samurai ancestors first settled there. Compelled to do whatever she could to help, she promised to return, once more, just for a month ... One Month in Tohoku is the true story of what became the many months Caroline spent visiting Oshika. During extended periods of time over the course of many years, she lived alongside the people of Oshika, and they embraced her as one of their own -- she still visits them to this day. This book tells us about a very traditional way of life in a remote community that cares deeply about all who are a part of it. It is the story of how, after a disaster took away everything they had, these seemingly forgotten fishing communities are still rebuilding their lives. It is also the story of how a network of people from all over the globe were inspired to donate millions of yen to support families, schools, and businesses, and to never forget the survivors of the world's costliest disaster. To commemorate the ten-year anniversary of the tsunami, Caroline has set out in words a deeply moving tale of the very human impact of a natural disaster. Readers will cry tears of laughter as well as tears of sadness, and be touched by Caroline's surprising humour and honesty and that of her Oshika friends as they unexpectedly become so beloved to one another. This is the story of a beautiful friendship between a very determined Englishwoman and the incredibly brave and resilient fishermen, women, and children of Tohoku.

Über Caroline Pover

Caroline Pover was born in Devon in 1971, grew up in Plymouth, and attended Exeter University before moving to Tokyo in 1996, in search of adventure. She lived in Japan full-time for almost fifteen years, running a number of businesses, giving speeches, and winning numerous awards for her entrepreneurial and philanthropic endeavours. Caroline unexpectedly ended up in the UK in the weeks after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. She spent the following years going back and forth between Japan and England, fundraising and also managing recovery projects for the remote fishing communities on Oshika - a peninsula that was very badly affected by the tsunami. To date, she has raised GBP170,000, which has funded over thirty different projects to help these communities rebuild. Caroline now lives in the Cotswolds, where she established Auntie Caroline's - a pickled onion and chutney business. She goes home to Japan every year. This is her fifth book, and first memoir - she considers it her love letter to Oshika. Sir David was British ambassador to Japan from 2008 to 2012, having served twice before in the British embassy in Tokyo during his career with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO). He was also head of the FCO's China Hong Kong department from 1998 to 2000, and a member of the FCO's board of management (as director of human resources) from 2004 to 2007. He retired from the FCO in January 2013. He is now visiting professor at Sheffield University, and chair of the council of the University of Kent. He is also chairman of the Japan Society, the leading independent body in the United Kingdom dedicated to UK-Japanese cultural, educational and business contacts, a member of the advisory board of Migration Matters, the campaigning group highlighting the benefits of legal migration, and a director of Aberdeen Japan Investment Trust.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Foreword v Acknowledgments vii Oshika Project Sponsors ix Preface xiii Introduction xvii Contents xxii Prologue 1 ONE DAY IN TOHOKU 3 1: Saipan 5 2: England 16 3: The Schools 26 4: Heathrow 40 5: Tokyo 48 6: Oshika-hanto 59 ONE MONTH IN TOHOKU 91 7: Preparation 93 8: Back to Oshika 103 9: My Routine 111 10: Oharahama 119 11: The Ohara Boys 130 12: The Peninsula 143 13: Valentine's Day 155 14: The Sasakis 163 15: The Donations 172 16: Farewells and the Future 181 ONE DECADE IN TOHOKU 197 17: Gardens 199 18: Ohara Summer Festival 212 19: Creating Beautiful Spaces 223 20: Creating Beautiful Memories 236 21: What to Wear 247 22: Remembrance 258 23: Settling 268 24: Shrines and Wines 278 25: A Princess 288 26: A Prince 299 27: New Homes 316 28: New Year's 330 29: New Normal 345 30: The Tenth Year 353 BEHIND THE STORY 373

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR011728078
9781838072704
1838072705
One Month in Tohoku: An Englishwoman's memoir on life after the Japanese tsunami Caroline Pover
Gebraucht - Sehr Gut
Broschiert
Alexandra Press
2020-08-31
410
N/A
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