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  1. Alex Kerr (born June 16, 1952) is an American writer and Japanologist . Biography. Originally from the Bethesda area in Montgomery County, Maryland, Kerr's father, a naval officer, was posted in Yokohama from 1964 to 1966. Kerr returned to the states and studied Japanese Studies at Yale University.

  2. 世流に逆らう. Seryu ni sakarau“Going Against the Trends of the Times” is a book of interviews between me and Abbot Saeki Kaisho of Joruriji Temple near Nara. Coming out november 2020. Finding the Heart Sutra. Asian Wisdom. Weaving together memory, history and calligraphy, Finding the Heart Sutra explores the many ways this brief but ...

  3. Alex Kerr. The joy of the book is that Alex Kerr arrived in Bangkok as a seeker, and now takes us along for a replay of the ride. At the end he admits Bangkok is too elusive to truly be "found". But he has written probably the best single "guide" for a visitor to Bangkok, short- or long-term, who wants to be provoked into looking at the city as ...

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  5. Dec 5, 2021. Yusuhara, Kochi Prefecture –. Perched high up in a settlement above the Kochi Prefecture town of Yusuhara, the Arcadian surroundings couldn’t be more perfect to catch up with author...

    • Chiara Terzuolo
  6. Genre. Nonfiction, Essays, Japanese Culture. edit data. Born in 1952, he's an American writer and Japanologist that has lived in Japan since 1977. Librarian note: There are other authors with the same name. To see the English historian go to Alex Kerr.

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  7. Sep 5, 2017 · Alex Kerr: A Taste of a Better Japan. Culture Sep 5, 2017. Alex Kerr has spent more than a decade restoring traditional houses in remote parts of Japan and using them to revive local...

  8. alexkerr.net › books › en-lost-japanLost Japan | Alex Kerr

    By Alex kerr. Lost Japan. Travel literature. Lost Japan is a series of autobiographical essays, describing experiences I had since coming to Japan as a boy in 1964, and how the country has changed. I wrote this book originally in Japanese as a series of articles for Shincho 45 magazine.

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