Tokyo Junkie
60 Years of Bright Lights and Back Alleys . . . and Baseball
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Tokyo Junkie is a memoir that plays out over the dramatic 60-year growth of the megacity Tokyo, once a dark, fetid backwater and now the most populous, sophisticated, and safe urban capital in the world.
Follow author Robert Whiting (The Chrysanthemum and the Bat, You Gotta Have Wa, Tokyo Underworld) as he watches Tokyo transform during the 1964 Olympics, rubs shoulders with the Yakuza and comes face to face with the city’s dark underbelly, interviews Japan’s baseball elite after publishing his first best-selling book on the subject, and learns how politics and sports collide to produce a cultural landscape unlike any other, even as a new Olympics is postponed and the COVID virus ravages the nation.
A colorful social history of what Anthony Bourdain dubbed, “the greatest city in the world,” Tokyo Junkie is a revealing account by an accomplished journalist who witnessed it all firsthand and, in the process, had his own dramatic personal transformation.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Whiting (You Gotta Have Wa) recounts his decades in Tokyo, first as a soldier in 1962 and later as a sportswriter, with a patter that lands like readers have pulled up a barstool to hear a traveler's yarns. He witnesses Japan rise from the ashes of WWII in preparation for the 1964 Olympics, and Tokyo's transformation from a poor and polluted city into one in which he can barely afford to live. Whiting's own identity similarly evolves, with section titles including "The Soldier," "The Student," "The Degenerate," and "The Penitent." These phases are filled in with short essays, some journalistic, as in pieces about the Olympics, baseball, and politics. Others reflect on a wild youth with sardonic distance. In the degenerate era, which not surprisingly offers some of the most riveting vignettes, Whiting recalls his tipsy exploits in Shinjuku, the commercial and business center of Tokyo, and his brushes with the yakuza. Throughout, he vividly paints Tokyo as a boomtown built on the national traits of fighting spirit and maximal effort. Closing on the postponement of the 2020 Olympics due to Covid-19, both the narrator and Tokyo seem to have grown at least intermittently wiser with experience. Whiting's love for his adopted city remains constant and contagious in this collage-style survey.