The bells of old Tokyo Meditations on time and a city

Anna Sherman, 1970-

Book - 2019

"The Bells of Old Tokyo is a remarkable literary debut by Anna Sherman that is an elegant and insightful tour of Tokyo and its residents, as well as a meditation on Japanese culture and society. The book is structured around Anna's search for the eight lost bells that once surrounded the city. These bells marked the city's neighborhoods and kept time for its inhabitants before the introduction of Western-style clocks. The bells are tangible vestiges of a much older Japan--one that believed in time as represented by animals, rather than minutes and hours, a circle rather than a forward line. Similarly, the book moves in and out of time as we are introduced to Tokyo residents past and present: An aristocrat who makes his way th...rough Tokyo's sea of ashes after WWII's firebombs. A shrine priest who remembers Yukio Mishima praying before his infamous death. A scientist who has built the most accurate clock in the world, a clock that will not lose a second in five billion years. The head of the Tokugawa house, the family that used to rule Tokyo, reflecting on the destruction of his grandfathers' city ('A lost thing is lost. To chase it leads to darkness'). And woven throughout is Anna's deep friendship with the owner of a small, exquisite coffee shop who believes that if you make coffee just right, and allow people the time to enjoy it, they will return to their 'true selves.' The Bells of Old Tokyo marks the arrival of a dazzling new writer as she presents an absorbing and alluring meditation on life in the guise of a tour through a city and its people"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Picador 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Anna Sherman, 1970- (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
337 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 317-332).
ISBN
9781250206404
  • The Bells of Time
  • Hibiya
  • Nihonbashi: The Zero Point
  • Asakusa: The Mythic Kanto Plain
  • Akasaka: The Invention of Edo
  • Mejiro: A Failed Coup
  • Nezu: Tokugawa Timepieces
  • Ueno: The Last Shogun
  • The Rokumeikan: The Meiji Restoration
  • Tsukiji: The Japanese Empire
  • Yokokawa-Honjo: East of the River
  • Marunouchi: New Origins
  • Kitasuna: The Firebombs of 1945
  • Shiba Kiridoshi: Tokyo Tower
  • Daylight Savings Time: The Occupation
  • Ichigaya: Postwar Prosperity
  • Shinjuku: Tokyo Tomorrow
  • Hibiya: The Imperial Hotel
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

Sherman, a British expat, recounts Tokyo's past and present in this absorbing blend of history, memoir, and travelogue. Her stated mission is to visit the city's Tokugawa-era bells, scattered across different neighborhoods, that, in the absence of clocks, would mark time by ringing. These bells structure the book and serve as its core symbol, suggesting an interwoven yet many-faceted sense of the past and present that underlie Tokyo. Under the Shogunate (1603-1867), time was irregular; the length of an hour varied by season. Emperor Meiji's adoption of Western standards of time in 1872 signaled a sharp break with tradition. This sense of nonlinearity suffuses Sherman's narrative, which darts from Daibo Coffee, where she practices Japanese with the exacting proprietor, to Japanese mythology to the devastation of the American firebombing campaign in 1945. Chapters are organized by neighborhood, giving the reader a sense of local and evocative texture, as when Sherman describes meeting a devoted maker of Tokugawa-style clocks in Nagoya, who celebrates the imprecision of his contraptions. An imaginative, well-researched introduction to Tokyo and its stunning complexity.--Sam Kling Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Sherman has written a beautiful debut of creative nonfiction that explores cultural interpretations of time, tracing the history of Tokyo from the Tokugawa Shogunate (1603--1867), when the city was known as Edo, to the 21st century. During the Shogun's time, eight bells were placed at various locations throughout the city; their purpose was to keep time in an era before clocks. Sherman explores a variety of neighborhoods and districts in Tokyo in an effort to locate these bells. The author not only describes her personal journey, but also tells the history of the areas she visits. Despite the fact that this work frequently jumps between time periods, it is an enjoyable read that is easy to follow. Throughout Sherman's adventures in Tokyo, she periodically seeks respite at her favorite coffee shop, Daibo, which unfortunately is no longer in operation. VERDICT Highly recommended for anyone who has visited or is planning to visit Tokyo. Readers will gain insight into the history, culture, and language of Japan as well as ideas on city hot spots.--Joshua Wallace, Tarleton State Univ. Lib. Stephenville, TX

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A poetic historical exploration of Japan's immense capital city by an American-born author who moved to Japan to learn the language and was inspired by composer Yoshimura Hiroshi's book Edo's Bells of Time.Living and working in Tokyo for some years as an editor for Hong Kong University Press inspired Sherman, who was born in Arkansas, to create this spiritual memoir, which weaves between personal storytelling of her time there and oral and mythical histories of the old neighborhoods of Tokyo. In the era of the shogunate, before the 16th-century missionaries brought the first clocks, Tokyo was Edo, and time was told by the tolling of bells across the city. The author presents Tokyo as a "timepiece," with each different neighborhood representing the site of an ancient temple hosting its own singular sacred bell, delineated in Hiroshi's work. Moving structurally from neighborhood to neighborhood, Sherman whimsically maps the city for readers, chronicling her encounters with the locals, including the owner of a small coffee shop with whom the author built a significant friendship. Sherman also explores the myths of the shogunate and illuminates the personal histories of the monks, bell-ringers, and other interesting characters she met along the way. Throughout her lyrical journey, she follows in the footsteps of Hiroshi, eschewing railroad travel in favor of tracing on foot "areas which bells could be heard, the pattern on a map looked like raindrops striking water." The author's own layered process mirrors the city's complexity, nonlinearity, and frozen beauty. The bells were not always easy to find, but Sherman was determined, and she successfully brings into focus their elusive stories, which point to an appealing past in a city that has moved rapidly into the future.Sharp attention to detail and a deliberate pace give this singular narrative history the sense of a shimmery, vanished past. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.