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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230424T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230424T183000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20230331T212137Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230426T215350Z
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SUMMARY:JFT Book Club Online – Manga: After the Rain by MAYUZUKI Jun
DESCRIPTION:Thank you to all those who participated in the JFT Book Club Online – Manga: After the Rain by MAYUZUKI Jun! \nFor those who missed the book club but are interested in reading the manga deeply by yourself\, click here to check out the guiding questions prepared by JFT Library staff for the meeting. Hope this helps enhance your reading experience! (In addition to discussing the questions\, we also did some ice breaking activities\, such as a mini Japanese quiz\, a character popularity poll\, etc. during this book club. )  \n*Ebooks and physical copies of After the Rain (Japanese version:『恋は雨上がりのように』) by MAYUZUKI Jun are available for circulation at JFT Library! See “WHERE YOU CAN FIND THE BOOK?” below for details or click here to download a PDF file about the creator details and the manga information. \n\nPlease continue to check the JFT’s website and newsletters for future events information. \n\n\n  \n \nFor the upcoming JFT Book Club Online\, we will discuss MAYUZUKI Jun’s manga (Japanese comic): After the Rain\, Volume 1 (原書:『恋は雨上がりのように』１～２巻)！ \nJoin us to chat about this sweet\, coming-of-age romance manga with a moving story filled with rich character development! The artist MAYUZUKI Jun is one of the most notable young talents in the industry and will be one of the featured guests of The Toronto Comic Arts Festival (TCAF) 2023! Let’s enjoy this heartfelt story together with other manga lovers in the lead-up to the artist’s TCAF appearance! \nRegister Here \n*Please be aware that space may be limited. For those new to book club or if you just want to listen this time\, we have newly created a small number of “Observer” slots!  \n*Depending on the number of the participants and how the discussion goes\, we might extend the end time until 7 pm (EDT). However\, if you have other commitments\, feel free to leave at 6:30 pm. \n  \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to email us at library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp. First-time participants are always welcome! \n  \n\nWHY JOIN JFT BOOK CLUB?\nYou can read a book by yourself\, but when you read something thought-provoking or moving\, it’s natural to want to discuss it with someone else. This will be an exciting opportunity to connect with other book lovers from different cultural backgrounds\, find new and interesting books\, authors\, or themes\, and develop a richer understanding of Japan that you wouldn’t gain from reading alone! \nHow the upcoming JFT Book Club online works?\n1. Once you register for the event\, you will receive guiding questions to help you think more deeply about the manga.\n2. On the day of the event\, we will meet via Zoom and will start with a quick icebreaker activity.\n3. Depending on the number of the participants\, we will break into a few small groups to discuss questions so that everyone has a chance to share their thoughts.\n4. After each breakout session\, each group will share what they have discussed with other groups. \n*There is no right or wrong answer. Different perspectives make discussion more fun and vibrant! \n\nWHERE YOU CAN FIND THE BOOK?\nAfter the Rain (『恋は雨上がりのように』) by MAYUZUKI Jun is available for circulation at JFT Library! Search JFT Library’s Online Catalogue or JF Digital Library (ebooks) to see if the item is available to borrow or to place a hold. \nTo get a new library card or to renew your existing card\, please follow the instructions found here. \nBorrow Ebook*Now Available*       Email Library to place hold (physical copy)  \n*The Japanese version of After the Rain (『恋は雨上がりのように』)\, Volume 1 – 10 (physical copies) are currently available at JFT Library for onsite patrons (In-library use only until the end of April). \n  \nFor more information about the book or where else you can get it\, click here. \n\nABOUT THE BOOK\nAfter the Rain (原書:『恋は雨上がりのように』) \nWritten and illustrated by MAYUZUKI Jun\nTranslated by Jocelyn Allen\nPublished by Vertical Comics\, an imprint of Kodansha USA Publishing\, LLC\, 2018 \n  \nAkira Tachibana is a reserved high school student who was the star of the track and field team but had to quit when she got injured. Sidelined and depressed\, Akira stops in at a family restaurant one rainy day\, and after the manager—a 45-year-old man with a young son—serves her free coffee\, she is smitten\, and soon takes a part-time job at the restaurant.\nDespite the age gap\, Akira is drawn to his kind nature\, and little by little\, the two begin to understand each other. One day\, she decides to finally tell her manager how she feels… but how will he react? \nIn 2018\, After the Rain won the 63rd Shogakukan Manga Award in the General category. \n\nABOUT THE AUTHOR\nMAYUZUKI Jun made her debut in the world of manga by winning the 1st Golden Tiara Grand Prize sponsored by Shueisha. Since then\, she has become widely celebrated as the creator of After the Rain\, a coming-of-age romance that was adapted into an anime series and a live-action movie\, and Sayonara Daisy\, a collection of her short stories published throughout her career. Her latest series Kowloon Generic Romance\, currently serialized in Weekly Young Jump Magazine\, won third place in Takarajimasha’s This Manga is Awesome! ranking in 2021 and was also a prize winner of the Manga Taisho Award that same year. Through her works\, awards\, and accolades\, Jun Mayuzuki is recognized as one of the most notable young talents in the industry. Her unique art and storytelling have been recognized worldwide\, which led her to be a featured artist on promotional posters for the Angoulême International Manga Festival in 2022. \nABOUT THE TRANSLATOR\nJocelyne Allen is a Japanese translator and interpreter and has translated hundreds of short stories\, novels\, and manga\, including the Eisner Award-winning Frankenstein by Junji Ito and the critically acclaimed Our Dreams at Dusk by Yuhki Kamatani. As an interpreter\, she has worked with Japan’s most celebrated authors and artists\, including Sayaka Murata\, Nagata Kabi\, Kyoko Nakajima\, and Asano Inio. @brainvsbook \n  \n\nRelated Programming:\nToronto Comic Arts Festival 2023 – Meet Manga Creator MAYUZUKI Jun @ JFT! \n \nPart 1: A Conversation with Jun Mayuzuki – Creator of After the Rain and Kowloon Generic Romance\nSaturday\, April 29 11:00 AM @ JFT Event Hall \nLearn about her amazing career\, starting from her early beginnings\, including After the Rain\, to her latest series Kowloon Generic Romance. \nPart 2: A Mangaka’s Creative Process with Jun Mayuzuki\nSaturday\, April 29 2:30 PM @ JFT Event Hall \nDon’t miss this rare opportunity to dive deep into the creator’s artistic process and life as a working mangaka! \n*Part 2 attendees can get tickets for Autograph Session @4:00 PM-5:00PM \n\n  \n\nLEARN MORE ABOUT MANGA (JAPANESE COMICS)\nFind out how manga are translated across genres in the first of the Parallel Worlds series of discussions\, Parallel Worlds: Translating Manga\, where translator Jocelyne Allen sits down with colleagues David Evelyn and Jenny McKeon to discuss the challenges and thrills of connecting two different cultures. You can now watch the recording on our YouTube channel. \nFor more recordings of past JFT lectures\, interviews\, presentations\, and expert discussions\, check out our Japan Dialogues collection. \n  \n\n\nPrevious Book Clubs\n\nJFT Book Club Online – Three Short Works by NISHI Kanako: On beauty\, the Female Experience and Othering – February 8\, 2023 \n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Temple Alley Summer by KASHIWABA Sachiko – September 15\, 2022 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 15\, 2022 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 13\, 2022 \n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Woman in the Purple Skirt by Natsuko Imamura– February 9\, 2022 \n\nJFT Book Club Online:Colorful by Eto Mori– November 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Heaven by Mieko Kawakami – August 12\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 8\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Memory Police – February 11\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n \nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/jft-book-club-online-manga_mayuzukijun/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:56.130366;-106.346771
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230208T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230208T183000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20230118T144307Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230318T161321Z
UID:80089-1675877400-1675881000@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:JFT Book Club Online - Three Short Works by NISHI Kanako: On beauty\, the Female Experience and Othering
DESCRIPTION:Thank you to all those who participated in The JFT Book Club Online – Three Short Works by NISHI Kanako: On beauty\, the Female Experience and Othering! \nFor those who missed the book club but are interested in reading her short works\, click here to check out the slides prepared by our guest moderator Ms. Kris Kosaka\, which includes discussion questions and supplementary explanations about Japanese culture depicted in the three short pieces by NISHI. Hope this helps enhance your reading experience! \n*NISHI Kanako’s short story VIO and the author’s essays On Beauty\, Sexual Violence\, and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and Merry Christmas are available online for free. See “WHERE YOU CAN FIND THE BOOK?” below for details or click here to check author details and where you can find more of her works. \n\nPlease continue to check the JFT’s website and newsletters for future events information. \n\n\n  \n \nFor the upcoming JFT Book Club Online\, we will discuss NISHI Kanako’s short story VIO along with the author’s essays On Beauty\, Sexual Violence\, and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and Merry Christmas. \nJoin our virtual conversation on the three thought-provoking works by NISHI Kanako\, one of the most iconic contemporary Japanese female authors and winner of the prestigious Naoki Prize. Although her works are incredibly popular in Japan\, most of NISHI Kanako’s books are yet to be translated into English. This will be an exciting opportunity to enjoy inspiring works by one of the most anticipated authors entering the international literary scene! \nKris Kosaka (Columnist\, The Japan Times) will be also joining us as a moderator to guide us through the session. \nRegister Here \n*Depending on the number of the participants and how the discussion goes\, we might extend the end time until 7 pm (EST). However\, if you have other commitments\, feel free to leave at 6:30 pm. \n*Please be aware that space may be limited.\n*Prior to the meeting\, an email will be sent to you with a website link and log-in password to enter the online Zoom meeting. \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to email us at library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp. First-time participants are always welcome! \n  \n\nWHY JOIN JFT BOOK CLUB?\nYou can read a book by yourself\, but when you read something thought-provoking or moving\, it’s natural to want to discuss it with someone else. This will be an exciting opportunity to connect with other book lovers from different cultural backgrounds\, find new and interesting books\, authors\, or themes\, and develop a richer understanding of Japan that you wouldn’t gain from reading alone! \n  \n\nWHERE YOU CAN FIND THE BOOK?\nNISHI Kanako’s short story VIO and the author’s essays On Beauty\, Sexual Violence\, and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and Merry Christmas are available online for free. \n  \n\n VIO\n\nI had an odd feeling as I regarded Yō\, who knew things about me that I hadn’t known. \n\nFiction written by NISHI Kanako\nTranslated by Allison Markin Powell\nGranta.com\, 2020 \nVIO is originally published in Japanese in the June 2019 issue of “Subaru”. The work has been translated into English by Allison Markin Powell as part of Granta’s 20 for 2020 series\, one of twenty timely and exciting new works from the Japanese published at Granta.com. \nRead Here \n\nOn Beauty\, Sexual Violence\, and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye\nMorrison neither consoled me as a victim\, nor condemned me as the perpetrator. \nEssay written by NISHI Kanako\nTranslated by Allison Markin Powell\nLiterary Hub\, 2020 \nRead Here \n\nMerry Christmas\nAfter all\, our bodies too are frameworks in and of themselves. We cannot escape these boundaries.\nBut we can make their edges softer. For the sake of others\, we can change shape\, and draw closer to one another \nEssay written by NISHI Kanako\nTranslated by Allison Markin Powell\nFifty Storms\, 2015 \nRead Here  \n*The Japanese version is available on NISHI Kanako Official Website. \n  \n\nLEARN MORE ABOUT NISHI KANAKO\nBurn (燃やす)\n\nThere was something running from my eyes\, but it definitely wasn’t tears.\nSomehow\, they didn’t deserve to be called tears.\nWhatever it was\, they were stickier than tears\, and gave off a strong smell.\nAnd anyway\, I certainly wasn’t crying. \nFiction written by NISHI Kanako\nTranslated by Allison Markin Powell\nGrove Atlantic\, 2018 \nBurn (the English version) is published by Grove Atlantic in 2018 in Freeman’s: Power\, the fifth issue of an anthology selected by literary critic John Freeman.  \n*The digital copy is available for circulation on Japan Foundation’s digital library (JF OverDrive). To get a new JFT library card or to renew your existing card\, please follow the instructions found here. \nRead Here   \n  \n「燃やす」 (the Japanese version) is published by Chikuma Shobo as part of NISHI Kanako’s anthology 『おまじない』 in 2021. \n*The digital copy of  『おまじない』is available for circulation on Japan Foundation’s digital library (JF OverDrive). To get a new JFT library card or to renew your existing card\, please follow the instructions found here. \nRead Here   \n  \n\n \nJFNY Literary Series: Kanako Nishi x Allison Markin Powell\n \nJFNY Literary Series invites notable writers in Japanese literature and their translators to discuss their work\, speak on the art of translation\, and touch upon the current literary scene in Japan. \nThis session on April 21\, 2021 featured Kanako Nishi and her translator Allison Markin Powell\, moderated by wrtier Kyoko Nakajima. Ginny Tapley Takemori from the collective Strong Women\, Soft Power and interpreter Bethan Jones also joined the session.  \nWatch Here\n  \n  \n  \n  \n\nABOUT THE AUTHOR\n© Shingo Wakagi \nNISHI Kanako (1977–) was born in Tehran\, Iran\, where her family had relocated for her father’s job. She subsequently lived in Japan for several years before moving with her family to Cairo\, Egypt\, where she spent four of her elementary school years. The male protagonist’s early life in her novel Saraba! (So Long!) roughly parallels her own. At 25 she began writing fiction\, and made her literary debut in 2004 with the short story collection Aoi (Blue). In 2006 she won the Oda Sakunosuke Prize for her novel Tsūtenkaku (Tower to Heaven)\, and in 2012 she received the Kawai Hayao Prize for the novel Fukuwarai (Funny Face). Her monumental 2014 novel Saraba!\, in which the action roves across all of the places where she has lived\, from Iran to Egypt and Osaka to Tokyo\, garnered her the prestigious Naoki Prize. Nishi’s forthright portrayals of the alienation experienced by characters with strong personalities have gained her a wide following\, especially among young readers. She is also known as an avid fan of professional wrestling. \n  \nABOUT THE TRANSLATOR\nAllison Markin Powell has been awarded grants from English PEN and the NEA\, and the 2020 PEN America Translation Prize for The Ten Loves of Nishino by Hiromi Kawakami. Her other translations include works by Osamu Dazai\, Kanako Nishi\, and Kaoru Takamura. She was the co-organizer and co-host of the Translating the Future conference\, served as co-chair of the PEN America Translation Committee and currently represents the committee on PEN’s Board of Trustees\, and as part of the collective\, Strong Women\, Soft Power\, is curating JFNY’s online literary series. \n  \n\nABOUT THE MODERATOR\nWriter Kris Kosaka moved to Japan in 1996 to accept a position teaching high school English at an international school. She fell in love with the country and soon met her future husband\, Makoto. They made their home in Kamakura\, where Kris continued teaching and writing while raising their two children. Although temporarily in Tampa\, FL (her hometown) while their daughter completes her high school education in the States\, Kris’s heart is in Japan. In her spare time\, Kris enjoys reading and running. Kris is a frequent contributor to The Japan Times\, and a regular columnist for their Books pages. \n  \n\n \nRelated Programming:\nTranscending Borders: Author NISHI Kanako in conversation with Dr. Christina Laffin \nBeloved Japanese author NISHI Kanako has written more than twenty novels\, essay and short story collections\, and children’s books. Her barrier-breaking works cross genres\, genders\, classes\, regions\, nations\, languages\, and media. In 2019\, Ms. Nishi moved to Vancouver\, Canada\, and stuck up a friendship with Canadian scholar of premodern Japanese literature Dr. Christina Laffin. In this JFT-exclusive interview\, Dr. Laffin sits down with Ms. Nishi to chat about the transnational themes behind Ms. Nishi’s works\, her impressions of Canada after living here the last three years\, and her thoughts on female authorship in Japan’s literary community. Available to watch from March 10 to 19. Registered viewers will have an opportunity to ask Ms. Nishi a question and receive a response. Register here. \n \n \nOnline Film Screening: Makuko • まく子 \nFriday\, March 17\, 5:59PM – Sunday\, March 19\, 11:59PM (ET) \nDirected by TSURUOKA Keiko • 2019 • Drama / Sci-Fi / Coming-of-Age • 108 min.\nPresented in Japanese with English subtitles • Trailer \nAdapted from the novel of the same name written by beloved Japanese author NISHI Kanako. \nFifth-grader Satoshi (YAMAZAKI Hikaru) is distressed by his changing body and feels repelled by his womanizing father (KUSANAGI Tsuyoshi). Then\, Satoshi gradually finds himself drawn to Kozue (Ninon)\, a mysterious transfer student who won’t leave his side. Kozue and her mother start living in the guesthouse of Satoshi’s family inn and soon Kozue confides in Satoshi an unbelievable secret: She came from another planet!  \n  \n\nPrevious Book Clubs\n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Temple Alley Summer by KASHIWABA Sachiko – September 15\, 2022 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 15\, 2022 \n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 13\, 2022 \n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Woman in the Purple Skirt by Natsuko Imamura– February 9\, 2022 \n\nJFT Book Club Online:Colorful by Eto Mori– November 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Heaven by Mieko Kawakami – August 12\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 8\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Memory Police – February 11\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n \nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/jft-book-club-nishikanako/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:56.130366;-106.346771
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230105T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230105T163000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20221212T220917Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230119T211831Z
UID:79359-1672918200-1672936200@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:Fukubukuro (Lucky Bags) 2023 @ JFT Library
DESCRIPTION:  \n*All the Fukubukuro bags are gone as of Thursday\, January 12. Thank you to all those who participated!\n \nFor those who are curious about what items were included in all the Fukubukuro bags\, check out the list of items inside the bags here. We hope you enjoyed experiencing a Japanese New Year custom and that this has helped you discover new favourite authors\, amazing film titles\, and interesting topics to explore that you never knew existed! \n*Search the Library’s Online Catalogue to see if the items are currently available to borrow or place hold. \nPlease continue to check the JFT’s website or newsletter for future event information. \n\n  \n \n  \nStarting Thursday\, January 5th\, 2023\, visitors to JFT’s Library can grab a Fukubukuro (福袋)\, or lucky bag\, containing secret selections of books and/or audiovisual materials from the Library. Enjoy serendipitous discovery from a curated selection of novels\, manga\, DVD/BR\, and more books about Japan or by Japanese authors! \n\nWhat is Fukubukuro (福袋)?\nFukubukuro (福袋\, “lucky bag”) is a Japanese New Year custom where people buy a mysterious sealed bags that are sold for a set price during the New Year period. Many shops\, businesses and department stores take part in this tradition and the sales begin on the first business day of the New Year. They typically contain products centred around a specific theme. Usually\, the bags are sold at a substantial discount and much less expensive than if you were to buy each item in the bag separately. The Fukubukuro is a very popular\, thrilling and highly anticipated event and people often even line up for hours to get the bags. \nThe term “fuku” (福) means “good fortune” or “luck”\, and “fukuro” (袋) – conjugated into “bukuro” – means “bag”. \n*The items in the JFT Library version of Fukubukuro are not for sales\, and must be returned to the Library by the due date. \n\nHow to participate in the Fukubukuro event\n*Please note the Fukubukuro event ends when the bags run out or on Tuesday\, January 31st\, 2023 at 4:30 pm (whichever is faster). \n1. Get or renew JFT Library Card \n・You need to have a valid JFT Library card to receive a Fukubukuro bag.\n・To apply for a new library card or renew your expired card\, please fill in our Library Card Application Form online and show your photo ID along with proof of address at the Library counter. Please note the library card is valid for one year and need to be renewed with valid ID. \n2. Grab a Fukubukuro bag and check it out at the Library Counter\n・Visit the JFT Library during the Library’s opening hours in January and grab a bag from the Fukubukuro table. *One bag maximum per library cardholder\n・Each bag contains 3 to 4 items. Please note those items will be counted toward the maximum number of items that can be checked out from the Library\, which is 15 total items (a 5-item limit for periodicals and audiovisual materials). \n3. Enjoy serendipitous discovery & share your thoughts!\n・Take the Fukubukuro bag home and enjoy discovering what’s inside!\n・If you are an active social media user\, feel free to post about the items in the bag and the Fukubukuro experience using the hashtag #JFTLibrary \n*We would really appreciate it if you could participate in our questionnaire. Your feedback is important to us and will help us organize more events in the future. \n4. Return the items by the due date\n・ The items in the bag are for loan and must be returned to the Library within a 3-week loan period (may be renewed once for another 3 weeks if there are no holds pending). You can keep the bag (JFT cotton bag) for yourself. \n  \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to email us. New members are always welcome! \n 
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/fukubukuro2023/2023-01-05/
LOCATION:The Japan Foundation\, Toronto\, 2 Bloor St. East\, 3rd Floor\, Toronto\, ON\, M4W 1A8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710659;-79.3857432
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=The Japan Foundation Toronto 2 Bloor St. East 3rd Floor Toronto ON M4W 1A8 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2 Bloor St. East\, 3rd Floor:geo:-79.3857432,43.6710659
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20221203T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20221203T163000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20221109T224516Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221114T221053Z
UID:78700-1670067000-1670085000@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:Nengajo Making Workshops 2022
DESCRIPTION:Our Nengajo making workshops are back for the first time in three years! \nPlease visit the JFT Library and enjoy creating 年賀状 nengajo– Japanese New Year’s postcards\, while learning some Japanese New Year phrases to ring in 2023: the year of the rabbit 卯 usagi. \nSpaces are limited. Please RSVP to book your space.  \nRegister Here \nSat Dec 3\, 2022 Library Opening Hours: 11:30 – 4:30\nEvent Schedule \n11:30 – 12:30  Nengajo Making Workshop #1 \n2:00 – 3:00 Nengajo Making Workshop #2 \n3:30 – 4:30 Nengajo Making Workshop #3
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/nengajo-making-workshops-2022/
LOCATION:The Japan Foundation\, Toronto\, 2 Bloor St. East\, 3rd Floor\, Toronto\, ON\, M4W 1A8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710659;-79.3857432
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=The Japan Foundation Toronto 2 Bloor St. East 3rd Floor Toronto ON M4W 1A8 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2 Bloor St. East\, 3rd Floor:geo:-79.3857432,43.6710659
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220915T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220915T190000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20220118T193600Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230209T185059Z
UID:73397-1663263000-1663268400@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:JFT Book Club Online - Temple Alley Summer by KASHIWABA Sachiko
DESCRIPTION:Thank you to all those who participated in The JFT Book Club Online – Temple Alley Summer by KASHIWABA Sachiko! \nPlease continue to check the JFT’s website and newsletters for future events information. \n\nFor the upcoming JFT Book Club Online\, we will discuss KASHIWABA Sachiko’s Temple Alley Summer (帰命寺横丁の夏)\, which won the American Library Association’s Batchelder Award this year. Ms. KASHIWABA will be one of the featured authors of the Toronto International Festival of Authors 2022. Join our virtual conversation about this sweet ghost story in the lead-up to Ms. KASHIWABA’s TIFA appearance on September 24! \nP.S. A special message from author KASHIWABA Sachiko will be shared exclusively with JFT Book Club participants! \nRSVP: library@jftor.org \n*Please be aware that space may be limited.\n*Prior to the meeting\, an email will be sent to you with a website link and log-in password to enter the online Zoom meeting. \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to email us. New members are always welcome! \n  \nWHY JOIN JFT BOOK CLUB? \nYou can read a book by yourself\, but when you read something thought-provoking or moving\, it’s natural to want to discuss it with someone else. This will be an exciting opportunity to connect with other book lovers from different cultural backgrounds\, find new and interesting books\, authors\, or themes\, and develop a richer understanding of Japan that you wouldn’t gain from reading alone. \n  \n\nWHERE YOU CAN FIND THE BOOK? \nTemple Alley Summer (帰命寺横丁の夏) by KASHIWABA Sachiko is available for circulation at JFT Library. Search JFT Library’s Online Catalogue or JF OverDrive (ebooks) to see if the item is available to borrow or to place a hold.  \nTo get a new library card or to renew your existing card\, please follow the instructions found here. \nFor more information about the book\, click here. \n\nABOUT THE BOOK \n Temple Alley Summer (帰命寺横丁の夏)\nWritten by KASHIWABA Sachiko\nIllustration by SATAKE Miho\nTranslated by Avery Fischer Udagawa\nYonder: Restless Books for Young Readers\, 2021 \n  \nKazu knows something odd is going on when he sees a girl in a white kimono sneak out of his house in the middle of the night—was he dreaming? Did he see a ghost? Things get even stranger when he shows up to school the next day to see the very same figure sitting in his classroom. No one else thinks it’s weird\, and\, even though Kazu doesn’t remember ever seeing her before\, they all seem convinced that the ghost-girl Akari has been their friend for years! \nWhen Kazu’s summer project to learn about Kimyo Temple draws the meddling attention of his mysterious neighbor Ms. Minakami and his secretive new classmate Akari\, Kazu soon learns that not everything is as it seems in his hometown. Kazu discovers that Kimyo Temple is linked to a long forgotten legend about bringing the dead to life\, which could explain Akari’s sudden appearance—is she a zombie or a ghost? Kazu and Akari join forces to find and protect the source of the temple’s power. An unfinished story in a magazine from Akari’s youth might just hold the key to keeping Akari in the world of the living\, and it’s up to them to find the story’s ending and solve the mystery as the adults around them conspire to stop them from finding the truth. \n\nABOUT THE AUTHOR \nKASHIWABA Sachiko is a prolific writer of children’s and young adult fantasy whose career spans more than four decades. Her works have garnered the prestigious Sankei\, Shogakukan\, and Noma children’s literature awards\, and her novel The Marvelous Village Veiled in Mist influenced Hayao Miyazaki’s film Spirited Away. Her books for children include the Monster Hotel series\, Great-Aunt’s Amazing Recipes\, Miracle Family\, The What’s-Next Library\, Temple Alley Summer\, The Witch Who Loved the King\, and Strange Journey from the Basement\, lately animated as The Wonderland. She has co-translated two fairy novels by Gail Carson Levine into Japanese\, and she edited a children’s version of the Tōno monogatari\, beloved folk legends collected by Kizen Sasaki and Kunio Yanagita. She lives in Iwate Prefecture. \nDownload PDF of the author details and TIFA related event info here \n  \nABOUT THE TRANSLATOR \nAvery Fischer Udagawa’s translations of children’s literature from Japanese include the 2022 Mildred L. Batchelder Award-winning novel Temple Alley Summer by Sachiko Kashiwaba\, illustrated by Miho Satake\, and the historical novel J-Boys: Kazuo’s World\, Tokyo\, 1965 by Shogo Oketani. Her short story translations have appeared in Kyoto Journal\, Words Without Borders\, Tomo: Friendship Through Fiction—An Anthology of Japan Teen Stories\, The Best Asian Short Stories 2018\, and A Tapestry of Colours 1: Stories from Asia. Born in Kansas\, she lives near Bangkok. \n  \n  \n\nRelated Programming: \n \nLegends and Folklore: Author KASHIWABA Sachiko talk Japanese children’s literature with Rui Umezawa \nFriday\, September 23\, 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM (ET) @ JFT Event Hall \nCelebrated novelist of children’s and young adult fiction KASHIWABA Sachiko is coming to Toronto! On September 23\, you’re invited to an exclusive talk with Ms. Kashiwaba and Canadian author Rui Umezawa. The two will sit down to discuss Japanese folklore\, community stories\, traditional tales vs. modern fantasies\, and much more! Admission for this event is free\, but registration is required. \nRegister Here  \n\nThe House of the Lost on the Cape – Film Screening\nSaturday\, September 24\, 7:00 PM (EDT) | Details and tickets > \n17-year-old run-away Yui and 8-year-old Hiyori\, who lost her family and her voice\, have no place to go when they run into Kiwa\, a strange old lady. She offers them a place to stay\, in a slightly banged-up old house overlooking the sea\, a Mayoiga. Despite joining Kiwa on a whim\, the two girls find comfort in Mayoiga\, a legendary house\, said to look after lost travelers\, and the warm hospitality of Kiwa. Both girls’ damaged hearts begin to heal little by little. Until one day\, a variety of strange beings which Kiwa calls “Fushigitto” begin popping up around the house. \nAuthor KASHIWABA Sachiko will be in-attendance for a Q&A after the screening. \nCo-presented with the Cheng Yu Tung East Asian Library \n \n  \n  \nPrevious Book Clubs\n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 15\, 2022 \n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 13\, 2022 \n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Woman in the Purple Skirt by Natsuko Imamura– February 9\, 2022 \n\nJFT Book Club Online:Colorful by Eto Mori– November 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Heaven by Mieko Kawakami – August 12\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 8\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Memory Police – February 11\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n \nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019 \n 
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/the-jft-library-book-club-kashiwaba/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710978;-79.386063
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220615T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220615T180000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20220630T183958Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220630T183958Z
UID:76618-1655310600-1655316000@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:JFT Book Club Online - Manga June 2022
DESCRIPTION:Thank you to all those who participated in The JFT Book Club Online – Manga! \nPlease continue to check the JFT’s website for future book club information. \nCheck out the list of books that were discussed during the book club below or download the full list here.\n*Search the Library’s Online Catalogue or JF OverDrive (electronic books) to see if the item is available to borrow or place hold. \n\n\n\n\n	TitleAuthorGenre\n\n\n\n\n	A Silent VoiceOima\, YoshitokiShonen\, Romance\, School Life\n\n\n	AyakoTezuka\, OsamuSeinen\, Mystery\, Suspense\n\n\n	Blue PeriodYamaguchi\, TsubasaSeinen\, Art\, School Life\n\n\n	Cells at Work！Shimizu\, AkaneShonen\, Science\, Adventure\n\n\n	Fire ForceOhkubo\, AtsushiShonen\, Dark Fantasy\, SF\n\n\n	KarnevalMikanagi\, TouyaJosei\, Action\, SF\n\n\n	Ode to KirihitoTezuka\, Osamu	Seinen\, Horror\, Medical\n\n\n	Sensei's Pious LieTorikai\, AkaneSeinen\, Romance\, Mature Drama\n\n\n	7 Billion NeedlesTadano\, NobuakiSeinen\, Horror\, SF\n\n\n	Tokyo RevengersWakui\, KenShonen\, Action\, SF\n\n\n\n\n\n\nShare your favourite manga (Japanese comics) and discover new genres and narratives you’ve never encountered before! \nJoin our next JFT Book Club Online and share your thoughts and passion for a manga title of your choice with other manga lovers. \nRSVP: library@jftor.org \n*Please be aware that space may be limited.\n*Prior to the meeting\, an email will be sent to you with a website link and log-in password to enter the online Zoom meeting. \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to email us. New members are always welcome! \n  \nWHY JOIN JFT BOOK CLUB? \nYou can read a book by yourself\, but when you read something thought-provoking or moving\, it’s natural to want to discuss it with someone else. This will be an exciting opportunity to connect with other book lovers from different cultural backgrounds\, find new and interesting books\, authors\, or themes\, and develop a richer understanding of Japan that you wouldn’t gain from reading alone. \nWHAT BOOK TO BRING? \nManga titles may be from any genre (shojo\, shonen\, comedy\, science fiction\, period drama\, psychological thrillers\, horror\, romance\, etc.) in the JFT Library collection. You can search whether the book is part of the JFT’s collection on our online catalogue or JF OverDrive (electronic books).\n*Manga must be translated from original Japanese to English or French* \n  \n\nLEARN MORE ABOUT JAPANESE MANGA \n \n  \nFind out how manga are translated across genres in the first of the Parallel Worlds series of discussions\, Parallel Worlds: Translating Manga\, where translator Jocelyne Allen sits down with colleagues David Evelyn and Jenny McKeon to discuss the challenges and thrills of connecting two different cultures. You can now watch the recording on our YouTube channel. \nFor more recordings of past JFT lectures\, interviews\, presentations\, and expert discussions\, check out our Japan Dialogues collection. \n  \n\nPrevious Book Clubs\n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 13\, 2022 \n  \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Woman in the Purple Skirt by Natsuko Imamura– February 9\, 2022 \n\nJFT Book Club Online:Colorful by Eto Mori– November 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Heaven by Mieko Kawakami – August 12\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 8\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Memory Police – February 11\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n\nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/jft-book-club-online-manga-june-2022/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710978;-79.386063
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220413T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220413T173000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20220422T213039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220425T200947Z
UID:75270-1649867400-1649871000@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:JFT Book Club Online - Bring Your Own Book April 2022
DESCRIPTION:Thank you to all those who participated in The JFT Book Club Online– Bring Your Own Book! \nPlease continue to check the JFT’s website for future book club schedules. \nCheck out the list of books that were discussed during the book club below or download the full list here.\n*Search the Library’s Online Catalogue or JF OverDrive (electronic books) to see if the item is available to borrow or place hold. \n\n\n\n\n	TitleAuthorGenre\n\n\n\n\n	A True NovelMizumura\, MinaeHistorical fiction\, Love story\n\n\n	Blue FlagKAITO Manga\, Love story\, LGBTQ2S+\n\n\n	Lonely Castle in the MirrorTsujimura\, MizukiFiction\, Mystery\n\n\n	My AnnihilationNakamura\, FuminoriFiction\, Thriller\n\n\n	Salvation of a SaintHigashino\, KeigoFiction\, Mystery\n\n\n	Temple Alley SummerKashiwaba\, Sachiko​Juvenile fiction\, Ghost story\n\n\n	The Cat Who Saved Books Natsukawa\, SosukeFiction\, Fantasy\n\n\n	The Decagon House MurdersAyatsuji\, YukitoFiction\, Mystery\n\n\n	The Language InsideThompson\, HollyJuvenile fiction\n\n\n	The Memory PoliceOgawa\, YokoScience Fiction\n\n\n	Water\, Wood\, and Wild ThingsKirshner\, HannahNon-fiction\, Travel essay \n\n\n\n\n\n\nShare your favourite book and get recommendations for future reads at JFT Book Club Online! \nJoin our next JFT Book Club Online to interact with other book lovers interested in Japanese culture and share your passion and thoughts about a book of your choice. \nRSVP: library@jftor.org \n*Please be aware that space may be limited.\n*Prior to the meeting\, an email will be sent to you with a website link and log-in password to enter the online Zoom meeting. \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to email us. New members are always welcome! \n  \nWHY JOIN JFT BOOK CLUB? \nYou can read a book by yourself\, but when you read something thought-provoking or moving\, it’s natural to want to discuss it with someone else. This will be an exciting opportunity to connect with other JFT Library users from different cultural backgrounds\, find new and interesting books\, authors\, or themes\, and develop a richer understanding of Japan that you wouldn’t gain from reading alone. \nWHAT BOOK TO BRING? \n\nBooks to share may be any physical or electronic books by Japanese authors or about Japan in the JFT Library collection – both fiction and non-fiction. You can search whether the book is part of the JFT’s collection on our online catalogue or JF OverDrive (electronic books).\n*Books must be written originally in English or translated from original Japanese to English or French*\nBring the book you currently have on loan and share what you’ve been reading!\nTalk about the most memorable book you’ve read from JFT Library’s collection. If you still remember it\, odds are\, the book was just that good!\nBe creative with getting your reading materials! Check out our Inventorial and Thematic Book Lists to get an idea for your next book.\n\n  \n\nPrevious Book Clubs\n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Woman in the Purple Skirt by Natsuko Imamura– February 9\, 2022 \n\nJFT Book Club Online:Colorful by Eto Mori– November 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Heaven by Mieko Kawakami – August 12\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 8\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Memory Police – February 11\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n\nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/jftbookclubonline-byob-april2022/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710978;-79.386063
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220209T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220209T173000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20220309T193521Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220309T193521Z
UID:74082-1644424200-1644427800@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:JFT Book Club Online: The Woman in the Purple Skirt by Natsuko Imamura
DESCRIPTION:For the upcoming JFT Book Club Online\, we will discuss Natsuko Imamura’s The Woman in the Purple Skirt (むらさきのスカートの女)\, an Akutagawa Prize-winning novel. Join our virtual conversation about this whimsical and mesmerizing book\, moderated by Kris Kosaka (Columnist\, The Japan Times). \nRSVP: library@jftor.org \n*Please be aware that space may be limited.\n*Prior to the meeting\, an email will be sent to you with a website link and log-in password to enter the online Zoom meeting. \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to email us. New members are always welcome! \n  \nWHY JOIN JFT BOOK CLUB?\nYou can read a book by yourself\, but when you read something thought-provoking or moving\, it’s natural to want to discuss it with someone else. (And Imamura is known for writing characters who are a little out of the ordinary!) JFT Book Club provides an exciting platform to meet other book lovers from different cultural backgrounds\, get inspired by a diversity of experiences and opinions\, and develop a richer understanding of the book and contemporary Japan that you wouldn’t gain from reading alone. What’s more\, we will be having an amazing moderator Kris Kosoda\, who is great at stimulating and facilitating the discussion. \n\nWHERE YOU CAN FIND THE BOOK? \nThe Woman in the Purple Skirt by Natsuko Imamura is available for circulation on JFT OverDrive. Sign in with your library card to borrow or to place a hold. To get a new library card or to renew your existing card\, please follow the instructions found here. \nFor more information about the book\, click here. \n\nABOUT THE BOOK \nThe Woman in the Purple Skirt (むらさきのスカートの女)\nWritten by Natsuko Imamura\nTranslated by Lucy North\nPenguin Publishing Group\, 2021 \nA bestselling\, prizewinning novel by one of Japan’s most acclaimed young writers\, for fans of Convenience Store Woman\, Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine\, and the movies Parasite and Rear Window. \n  \nI think what I’m trying to say is that I’ve been wanting to become friends with the Woman in the Purple Skirt for a very long time… \nAlmost every afternoon\, the Woman in the Purple Skirt sits on the same park bench\, where she eats a cream bun while the local children make a game of trying to get her attention. Unbeknownst to her\, she is being watched–by the Woman in the Yellow Cardigan\, who is always perched just out of sight\, monitoring which buses she takes\, what she eats\, whom she speaks to. \nFrom a distance\, the Woman in the Purple Skirt looks like a schoolgirl\, but there are age spots on her face\, and her hair is dry and stiff. She is single\, she lives in a small apartment\, and she is short on money–just like the Woman in the Yellow Cardigan\, who lures her to a job as a housekeeper at a hotel\, where she too is a housekeeper. Soon\, the Woman in the Purple Skirt is having an affair with the boss and all eyes are on her. But no one knows or cares about the Woman in the Yellow Cardigan. That’s the difference between her and the Woman in the Purple Skirt. \nStudiously deadpan and chillingly voyeuristic\, and with the off-kilter appeal of the novels of Ottessa Moshfegh\, The Woman in the Purple Skirt explores envy\, loneliness\, power dynamics\, and the vulnerability of unmarried women in a taut\, suspenseful narrative about the sometimes desperate desire to be seen. \n“A taut and compelling depiction of loneliness and obsession.” –Paula Hawkins\, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Girl on the Train \n“[It] will keep you firmly in its grip.” –Oyinkan Braithwaite\, bestselling author of My Sister\, the Serial Killer \n“The love child of Eugene Ionesco and Patricia Highsmith.” –Kelly Link\, bestselling author of Get in Trouble \n\nABOUT THE AUTHOR \nNatsuko Imamura is one of Japan’s most exciting writers. Nominated three times for the Akutagawa Prize\, the most prestigious literary award in Japan\, she won it in 2019 for The Woman in the Purple Skirt. A self-professed fan of Yoko Ogawa’s\, she has been called “a second Sayaka Murata” (the author of Convenience Store Woman) for her use of acerbic humor and satire. Born in Hiroshima\, she now lives in Osaka with her husband and their daughter. Like the main character in The Woman in the Purple Skirt\, she has worked in a hotel as a housekeeper. \n\nABOUT THE MODERATOR \nWriter Kris Kosaka moved to Japan in 1996 to accept a position teaching high school English at an international school. She fell in love with the country and soon met her future husband\, Makoto. They made their home in Kamakura\, where Kris continued teaching and writing while raising their two children. Although temporarily in Tampa\, FL (her hometown) while their daughter completes her high school education in the States\, Kris’s heart is in Japan. In her spare time\, Kris enjoys reading and running. Kris is a frequent contributor to The Japan Times\, and a regular columnist for their Books pages. \n  \n\nPrevious Book Clubs\n\nJFT Book Club Online:Colorful by Eto Mori– November 10\, 2021\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Heaven by Mieko Kawakami – August 12\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Manga – June 10\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 8\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Memory Police – February 11\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n\nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/the-jft-library-book-club-thewomaninthepurpleskirt/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710978;-79.386063
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210610T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210610T160000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20210505T190613Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220421T142410Z
UID:52182-1623337200-1623340800@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:The JFT Library Book Club Online: Manga - June 2021
DESCRIPTION:The JFT Book Club Online: Manga took place Thursday\, June 10\, 2021 @ 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm (EDT) \nCheck out the list of books that were discussed and recommended by participants or download the full list below. \nSee our collection of manga available to borrow on JF OverDrive or our Online Library Catalogue to see if they are available for circulation at our library. \nThank you to everyone who participated! \n  \nThe JFT Library Book Club Online: Manga Booklist\n \n\n\n\n\n	TitleAuthorGenre\n\n\n\n\n	3x3 EyesTakada\, YuzoSeinen\, Adventure\, Romance\n\n\n	March Comes In Like a LionUmino\, ChicaSeinen\, Coming-of-age\, Romance\n\n\n	Message to AdolfTezuka\, OsamuSeinen\, Historical\n\n\n	Natsume's Book of FriendsMidorikawa\, Yuki Shojo\, Supernatural\n\n\n	RealInoue\, TakehikoSeinen\, Sports\n\n\n	Sayonara Zetsubou-senseiKumeta\, KojiShonen\, Dark comedy\n\n\n	Witch Hat AtelierShirahama\, Kamome Seinen\, Fantasy\n\n\n\n\n\nThe theme for this month’s JFT Library Book Club is manga (Japanese comics)! Join the JFT Book Club to discover new genres and narratives you’ve never encountered before and share your personal favourites! \n  \nThursday\, June 10\, 2021 [3:00 pm – 4:00 pm] \nRead and share a manga title of your choice with other library users and get recommendations for future reads. Manga titles may be from any genre – shojo\, shonen\, comedy\, science fiction\, period drama\, psychological thrillers\, horror\, romance\, etc. \nLooking for manga to read?\nCheck out our collection of manga available to borrow on JFT OverDrive or this Manga book list available in JFT Library.\nBooks may be from any section of the JFT Library – physical or digital from JFT OverDrive.\n*Books must be written originally in English or translated from original Japanese to English or French* \nThe JFT Library Book Club will be conducted through Zoom. Please email the library at library@jftor.org to reserve your seat.\nPrior to the meeting\, an email will be sent to you with a website link and log-in password to enter the online Zoom meeting.\nPlease be aware that space may be limited. \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to contact us via email. \nThank you for participating! \n\n \nInterested in learning more about Japanese manga? \nFind out more about how manga are translated across genres in the first of the Parallel Worlds series of discussions\, Parallel Worlds: Translating Manga\, on June 17\, 2021 at 8:00PM (EDT)\, where translator Jocelyne Allen sits down with colleagues David Evelyn and Jenny McKeon to discuss the challenges and thrills of connecting two different cultures. \n\nPrevious Book Clubs\n\nJFT Book Club Online: Bring Your Own Book – April 8\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Memory Police – February 11\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n\nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/the-jft-library-book-club-manga-june-2021/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710978;-79.386063
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210408T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210408T160000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20201130T161925Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210617T153745Z
UID:49632-1617894000-1617897600@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:The JFT Library Book Club Online - Bring Your Own Book
DESCRIPTION:The JFT Library Book Club – Bring Your Own Book  April 2021\nThank you to all those who participated in The JFT Library Book Club Online– Bring Your Own Book on April 8\, 2021 \n  \nCheck out the list of books that were discussed during the book club below or download the full list here. \n  \n  \n  \nPlease continue to check the JFT’s website for future book club schedules. \n\nJoin the Book Club and be part of the JFT Library community. Share a book of your choice with other library users and get recommendations for future reads! \n  \nThursday\, April 8\, 2021 [3:00 pm – 4:00 pm] \nBooks may be from any section of the JFT library – both fiction and non-fiction.\n*Books must be written originally in English or translated from original Japanese to English or French* \n  \nFor the book club\, you may: \n\nBring the book you currently have on loan and share what you’ve been reading!\nTalk about the most memorable book you’ve read from JFT Library’s collection. If you still remember it\, odds are\, the book was just that good!\nBe creative with getting your reading materials! Check out our Inventorial and Thematic Book Lists to get an idea for your next book. You can search whether the book is part of JFT’s collection through our online catalogue.\n\n  \nThe JFT Library Book Club will be conducted through Zoom. Please email the library at library@jftor.org to reserve your seat. \nPrior to the meeting\, an email will be sent to you with a website link and log-in password to enter the online Zoom meeting.\nPlease be aware that space may be limited. \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to contact us via email. \nThank you for participating! \n\nPrevious Book Clubs\n\nJFT Book Club Online: The Memory Police – February 11\, 2021 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n\nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/the-jft-library-book-club-bring-your-own-book/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710978;-79.386063
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210211T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210211T160000
DTSTAMP:20260615T055349
CREATED:20210218T215519Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210224T221240Z
UID:51382-1613055600-1613059200@tr.jpf.go.jp
SUMMARY:The JFT Library Book Club Online - The Memory Police by Yoko Ogawa
DESCRIPTION:  \n \n  \n  \nJoin our first book club of year 2021! \nWe will discuss the highly-acclaimed novel “The Memory Police (密やかな結晶)” by Yoko Ogawa\, shortlisted for the 2020 International Booker Prize and finalist of the 2019 National Book Award. \n  \nThursday\, February 11\, 2020 [3:00 pm – 4:00 pm] \n  \n  \n  \nThe JFT Library Book Club will be conducted through Zoom. Please email the library at library@jftor.org to reserve your seat. \nPrior to the meeting\, an email will be sent to you with a website link and log-in password to enter the online Zoom meeting.\nPlease be aware that space may be limited. \nIf you have any questions or concerns\, please don’t hesitate to contact us via email. \nThank you for participating! \n\nThe Memory Police by Yoko Ogawa\nPantheon\, 2019 \nOn an unnamed island off an unnamed coast\, objects are disappearing: first hats\, then ribbons\, birds\, roses—until things become much more serious. Most of the island’s inhabitants are oblivious to these changes\, while those few imbued with the power to recall the lost objects live in fear of the draconian Memory Police\, who are committed to ensuring that what has disappeared remains forgotten. \nWhen a young woman who is struggling to maintain her career as a novelist discovers that her editor is in danger from the Memory Police\, she concocts a plan to hide him beneath her floorboards. As fear and loss close in around them\, they cling to her writing as the last way of preserving the past. \nA surreal\, provocative fable about the power of memory and the trauma of loss\, The Memory Police is a stunning new work from one of the most exciting contemporary authors writing in any language. (book description from Amazon.ca) \n\nPrevious Book Clubs\n\nJFT Book Club Online: Breasts and Egg – November 5\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online: Travel Japan – August 20\, 2020 \n\nJFT Book Club Online – June 11\, 2020 \n\n\nMemoirs of a Polar Bear – February 20\, 2020 \n\nThe Little House – December 12\, 2019 \n\nMystery Book Club – October 10\, 2019 \n\nMovies and Books – August 8\, 2019 \n\n\nBooks and Tea – June 6\, 2019
URL:https://tr.jpf.go.jp/event/the-jft-library-book-club-online-the-memory-police-by-yoko-ogawa/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Library
ORGANIZER;CN="The Japan Foundation%2C Toronto Library":MAILTO:library_jftoronto@jpf.go.jp
GEO:43.6710978;-79.386063
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR