Book of the Week: Fifty Sounds by Polly Barton.
The Japanese language differs from English in having a delineated category of mimetic words—words that sound like what they mean. Barton uses a sequence of fifty of these onomatopoeia, from giro’ to uho-uho, to structure a memoir of her developing relationship with Japanese and with Japan, from teaching language on a small Japanese Island when she was twenty-one to her eventual career as a Japanese literary translator and now writer. This interesting book is also a record of Barton's exploration of freedom and identity in the interstices of language.
>>Read Thomas's review.
>>Uwaa: the sound of the feeling that cannot be spoken.
>>Connection fever.
>>A new Japanese dictionary.
>>Connection fever.
>>A new Japanese dictionary.
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