W.A.G.A.


Book Description

Little happening during the golf season with a group golfers that called themselves the W.A.G.A. golfing men.




GOR ZULAN, le petit trou de Goro Waga


Book Description

Un soir, alors que tous les clients étaient partis et que je m’apprêtais à regagner le domicile familial qui était juste au premier étage de mon supermarché, j’avais nettement entendu ce nigaud de trou en pourparlers avec un autre plus gros qui se trouvait à quelques encablures de là. Je ne savais quand avait débuté leur deal. Ils faisaient copains-copains. Je pensais béatement que les grands trous pouvaient faire du mal aux plus petits, mais le constat est maintenant qu’ils sont devenus des alliés, mieux des comploteurs. Ils parlaient ensemble des stratégies de conquête des espaces. Ils rêvaient d’un empire constitué de trous. Le gros trou expliquait au plus petit comment on fait pour devenir grand et surtout pour faire parler de soi. Il lui disait comment lui-même avait provoqué un éboulement qui avait fini par faire déguerpir les habitants du quartier Ouest. Il lui narrait que choisir de rester indéfiniment un petit trou n’est pas une fatalité, mais une option. Il voulait savoir si lui, tout minuscule trou qu’il est, voudrait toujours rester aussi minable.




Waga's Big Scare


Book Description

Waga isn't the biggest or hairiest or slimiest monster. But Waga is the trickiest monster with the biggest scare. . . until one night, the scare is missing! If Waga doesn't find the scare before morning, Waga will disappear for good. Time is running out! Where could the scare be?







A Nation of a Hundred Million Idiots


Book Description

This book offers a history of Japanese television audiences and the popular media culture that television helped to spawn. In a comparatively short period, the television industry helped to reconstruct not only postwar Japanese popular culture, but also the Japanese social and political landscape. During the early years of television, Japanese of all backgrounds, from politicians to mothers, debated the effects on society. The public discourse surrounding the growth of television revealed its role in forming the identity of postwar Japan during the era of high-speed growth (1955-1973) that saw Japan transformed into an economic power and one of the world's top exporters of television programming.




Shinkokinshū (2 vols)


Book Description

The Shinkokinshū: A New Collection of Poems Ancient and Modern (ca. 1205) is supreme among the twenty-one anthologies of court poetry ordered by the Japanese emperors between the tenth and fifteenth centuries in terms of overall literary art, the high quality of the almost two thousand poems included, and the depth of poetic sentiment. Laurel Rasplica Rodd's complete translation allows the reader to appreciate the elaborate integration of the anthologized poems into a single whole by means of chronological procession or imagistic association from one poem to the next that was perfected in the Shinkokinshū by Retired Emperor Gotoba, himself a serious poet, and the courtiers he appointed as compilers, including Fujiwara no Teika, one of the greatest of Japanese poets.




Kokinshū


Book Description

This book is the first complete translation of the tenth-century work Kokinshu, one of the most important anthologies of the Japanese classical tradition.




Federal Register


Book Description




文字のしるべ


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Reports


Book Description