There are still remnants of this going today on Bookstagram - #JanuaryInJapan and #KoreanMarch are two themed months I look forward to every year. It's just a shame this kind of approach is so antithetical to the day-to-day reality of running a games site in the year 2026!
My January wrap-up post has all the links and info from #JanuaryInJapan - click on the link for more info :)
tonysreadinglist.wordpress.com/2026/02/01/j...
Whelp #JanuaryinJapan is officially over!
I read 10 books and 7 manga. The thread breakdown is below.
The top 2 books I read were The Tale of the Heike and The Tales of Ise
The top 2 manga were Dear Brother by Riyoko Ikeda and Vaelber Saga by Nobuteru Yuuki
#booksky 💙📚
📚💙 Started the year by buddy-reading In His Chart (Kamisama no Karute) series in Indonesian for #JanuaryInJapan.
IHC is a medical drama about an idealist doctor whose world view was shaken by people around him. The balance between comedy and grim reality made the characters shine.
Final day of #januaryinjapan! (aka #japanuary?)
Haneko Takayama is the most recent Akutagawa winner with free work available. She won in 2020 for "A Horse from Shuri", about a museum archivist in Okinawa. Her SF story, Udon—Unknown Dog of Nobody has also been translated into English by LK Nithya.
New on my blog today: #JanuaryinJapan: At the Edge of the Wood findingtimetowrite.wordpress.com/2026/01/30/j...
#JanuaryinJapan: At the Edge of the Wood findingtimetowrite.wordpress.com/2026/01/30/j... > via @marinasofia.bsky.social
My latest #JanuaryInJapan reread is of Kuniko Mukōda’s 'The Woman Next Door' (translated by A. Reid Monroe-Sheridan: Kurodahan Press), an engaging set of five stories featuring ordinary people in slightly depressing lives...
tonysreadinglist.wordpress.com/2021/06/07/t...
My final post for #JanuaryInJapan looks at Thomas Gaubatz's 'The Textual Townsman' (courtesy of Columbia University Press), a book that takes us back to the Tokugawa period and examines it through the eyes of two writers:
tonysreadinglist.wordpress.com/2026/01/29/t...
Another book about 'The Tale of Genji'?! My latest #JanuaryInjapan review looks at Richard Bowring's 'Landmarks of World Literature: Murasaki Shikibu – The Tale of Genji' :)
tonysreadinglist.wordpress.com/2026/01/26/l...
On the Ramblings today, for the #japaneseliteraturechallenge and #januaryinjapan I explore a heartbreaking short work, Grave of the Fireflies. More here: kaggsysbookishramblings.wordpress.com/2026/01/26/b...
Still #reading #JanuaryinJapan with @readjapaneseliterature.com The Wild Goose by Ogai Mori from the charming Olea in Jounieh, #Lebanon #photography #iPhone #urban
We're back with Genji for my latest #JanuaryInJapan post, and in Chapter 20, 'Asagao', he's once again making eyes at a woman who's trying to say no - while poor Murasaki's heart breaks back at home...
tonysreadinglist.wordpress.com/2026/01/23/t...
🫶 I haven't really read #JanuaryinJapan this year, but that doesn't mean that I don't love Japanese literature.
There are some classic crimes here, some contemporary fiction, as well as murder mysteries. Of all the translated fiction that I read, Japanese fiction is perhaps my favourite.
#JanuaryinJapan: Shanghai in the 1920s and Underdogs and Warlords findingtimetowrite.wordpress.com/2026/01/21/j...
#JanuaryinJapan: Underdogs and Warlords findingtimetowrite.wordpress.com/2026/01/21/j... > via @marinasofia.bsky.social
My latest #JanuaryInJapan review takes us far into the future with Hiromi Kawakami's 'Under the Eye of the Big Bird' (translated by Asa Yoneda, published by Granta Books), a novel telling us all about the human race, and how it ends... tonysreadinglist.wordpress.com/2026/01/21/u...
#JanuaryinJapan: Underdogs and Warlords findingtimetowrite.wordpress.com/2026/01/21/j...
#JanuaryinJapan: Underdogs and Warlords
findingtimetowrite.wordpress.com/2026/01/21/j...
Read as part of @readjapaneseliterature.com's #JanuaryinJapan season: I enjoyed the creepy open-endedness of 'The Farside' by Hideo Furukawa & translated by @ginnytkmr.bsky.social.
Reflection of a camera flash misfiring. The background is the coastal town of Jounieh, Lebanon at sunset, in the background of an urban scene. The view is taken from a cafe overlooking the bay of Jounieh
The view from a #coffee shop. The flash popped up by mistake and I liked the reflection. #Reading Shoen Nakajima’s “ A Famous Flower in Mountain Seclusion “ with @readjapaneseliterature.com during #JanuaryInJapan. #Photography #Urban #VSCO
Another #JanuaryInJapan reread (see the comments for a link to my 2010 review) is of Yukio Mishima's sublime 'The Temple of the Golden Pavilion' (translated by Ivan Morris).
Calling Haruki Murakami fans! My recent #JanuaryInJapan reread was carried out to enable a post comparing the book and film versions of 'after the quake' (translated by Jay Rubin: directed by Tsuyoshi Inoue).
For #JanuaryinJapan my first experience of the 'other' Murakami, Ryu (translated by Ralph McCarthy), Piercing:
1streading.wordpress.com/2026/01/18/p...
My most recent #JanuaryInJapan reread was of Shion Miura's 'The Great Passage' (translated by Juliet Carpenter), which - as is hopefully obvious from the photo - has to do with creating a dictionary.
Another week has passed, and we still don’t have any cats here. In the meantime, check out “I Am a Cat” by Soseki Natsume. Translated from Japanese, this classic follows an unwanted kitten observing the trials of human society. #januaryinjapan #inkdrinkers #booksbooksbooks
It's #JanuaryinJapan and here's my first Japanese read of the year - Heaven by Meiko Kawakami - superb. annabookbel.net/heaven-by-mi...
If you were missing some sword-fighting for #JanuaryInJapan, today's post has got you covered as we head back to the 14th/17th century with 'Chūshingura' (translated by Donald Keene), the story of revenge being best serve cold and violently ;)
tonysreadinglist.wordpress.com/2026/01/14/c...
#JanuaryInJapan: Was Sensei, like Oblomov, a 'superfluous man'? anzlitlovers.com/2026/01/12/k...