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William Gibson Yoko Ono Barry Eisler Jake Adelstei et al - 2:46 Aftershocks: Stories From the Japan Earthquake; The Quakebook 午後2時46分すべてが変わった

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William Gibson Yoko Ono Barry Eisler Jake Adelstei et al 2:46 Aftershocks: Stories From the Japan Earthquake; The Quakebook 午後2時46分すべてが変わった

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In just over a week, a group of unpaid professional and citizen journalists who met on Twitter created a book to raise money for Japanese Red Cross earthquake and tsunami relief efforts. In addition to essays, artwork and photographs submitted by people around the world, including people who endured the disaster and journalists who covered it, 2:46: Aftershocks: Stories from the Japan Earthquake contains a piece by Yoko Ono, and work created specifically for the book by authors William Gibson, Barry Eisler and Jake Adelstein. The primary goal, says the books editor, a British resident of Japan, is to record the moment, and in doing so raise money for the Japanese Red Cross Society to help the thousands of homeless, hungry and cold survivors of the earthquake and tsunami. The biggest frustration for many of us was being unable to help these victims. I dont have any medical skills, and Im not a helicopter pilot, but I can edit. A few tweets pulled together nearly everything all the participants, all the expertise and in just over a week we had created a book including stories from an 80-year-old grandfather in Sendai, a couple in Canada waiting to hear if their relatives were okay, and a Japanese family who left their home, telling their young son they might never be able to return. ONE HUNDRED PERCENT of the price you pay (net of VAT, sales and other taxes) goes to the Japanese Red Cross Society to aid the victims of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. If youd like to donate more, please visit the Japanese Red Cross Society website, where you can donate either via Paypal or bank transfer (watch out for the fees, though!) or the American Red Cross Society, which accepts donations directed to its Japan Earthquake and Pacific Tsunami fund (but only accepts donations made with U.S.-issued credit cards). And of course, if you like the book, please tell your friends, and tell them to give generously as well! Thank you! Japan really does appreciate your help!

William Gibson Yoko Ono Barry Eisler Jake Adelstei et al: author's other books


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This book was written as a record of the disaster that befell Japan as well as - photo 1

This book was written as a record of the disaster that befell Japan, as well as a way to provide relief for the survivors. If you received this copy for free, please consider donating to the Japanese Red Cross at www.quakebook.org

2011.03.18 9:13am

Have asked @fatblueman (of Christmas in Japan video fame) to start writing a song for Japan quake survivors, and it got me thinking...

2011.03.18 9:18am

I want to compile a book of quake experiences and publish it like within a week and donate all profits to Red Cross We have the technology.

2011.03.18 9:22am

If everyone wrote 250 words - one page - or submitted their favourite (original) tweets, pics or artwork, I could edit, publish it in days

Contents
Yoshiko Ikeda
Steve Nagata
Masumi Nabekawa
Yoko Ono Lennon
Christopher Maurer
Jonas Neergaard-Nielsen
Yoshie Sherriff
Arun Vemuri
Yuki Watanabe
Brian Wood
Wesley Cheek
Florian
Debora K Ohnishi
Vadim Zendejas
Michael Gakuran
Shaun Hickox
Andy Heather
Greg Harbin
Ted Taylor
Andy Sharp
Brighid Rader
Brent Stirling
Grandfather Hibiki
Tokyo Twilighter
James Hou
Takamori Hayao
Mark Rende
Miho Nishihiro
Kosuke Ishihara
Joel David Neff
Rodney Van Meter
Michiko Segawa
Maxamillian John
Lowlypoetic
N Cobayne
Naomi
John Janzen
May Arai
Tom Hope
Victoria
Yui and Shizue Nonaka
Kimberly Tierney
Hiromi Davis
Sandra Barron
Soso Bureau staff
Matthew Holmes
Shehan Raban
Stephen Lyth
Jake Adelstein
Yuichiro Ito
Edan Corkill
Yumiko Takemoto
Laurent Fintoni
Naotoshi Nabekawa
Jason Morgan
Corey Wallace
Mark Warschauer
Mari Aquarian
Arthur Davis
Keiko Fujii
Annamarie Sasagawa
Ian Martin
Chikae Singleton
Mr Salaryman
Yoko Kobayashi
Don Myles
Sybil Murray
Baye McNeil
Miles Woodroffe
James Simpson
Terrie Matsuura
Ai Hinton
Robert Ouwehand
Richard Smart
Jesse Johnson
Iain Hair
Joseph Tame
Bigger in Japan
Yuko Kato
Mari Kurisato
Kaoru Raban
Philip Brasor
Tomoko Perez
Kevin Wood
Dan Castellano
William Gibson
Yushi Tabe

246: Aftershocks: Stories from the Japan Earthquake #quakebook

Copyright 2011 Patrick Sherriff All Rights Reserved

Design: Edward Harrison

Cover Design: James White

Published by Enhanced Editions Ltd.,

307 Westbourne Studios, 242 Acklam Road, London, W10 5JJ

ISBN 978-0-9568836-0-5

Foreword

For me, Tokyo was metropolitan love at first sight. It was 1992, and the government sent me for a language homestay. I got off the Skyliner at Ueno Station from Narita and that was it, I was done for. I could try to tell you why -- the energy of the place, its strangeness, the feeling of method to the madness -- but really, you might as well try to explain your first crush, your first love, the attraction of a lifelong romance. Whatever you can explain in words won't quite be it. The real connection is always too deep, too elusive, too mysterious ever to be corralled by language. The words will never get it right.

Still, if you're in love and you're a writer, you have to try. You might even create a character, say, a half-Japanese, half-American assassin, to help you:

"At first light, the whole of Shibuya feels like a giant sleeping off a hangover. You can still sense the merriment, the heedless laughter of the night before, you can hear it echoed in the strange silences and deserted spaces of the area's twisting backstreets. The drunken voices of karaoke revelers, the unctuous pitches of the club touts, the secret whispers of lovers walking arm in arm, all are departed, but somehow, for just a few evanescent hours in the quiet of early morning, their shadows linger, like ghosts who refuse to believe the night has ended, that there are no more parties to attend."

If my books have been love letters to Japan, this one is an SOS. I'm both proud and humbled to be part of it, to be in a position to reach others who love Japan and long for Japan so that together we can give back some of what we've received, and to do something to help Japan back to her feet.

Barry Eisler Introduction The idea for this book came out of desperation - photo 2

Barry Eisler

Introduction

The idea for this book came out of desperation; desperation to do something for a country on its knees.

As I write this, intense aftershocks still force me out onto the street with my daughter in my arms, even though we live far from the hardest-hit areas of the country, and far more comfortably than the thousands in refugee shelters.

After nightfall, my city is dark, as we all try to use the least electricity possible to save energy for more important uses. We wear coats in our homes against the cold. We sleep in our clothes in case our homes collapse and we have to run for our lives. Weve forbidden our children from drinking tap water for fear of poisoning them with radiation. And we are the lucky ones.

Those of us who live in Japan are in a state of war. But not a war against a nation, or even nature. We are fighting defeat, worry and hopelessness. The question is: Are we strong enough to overcome?

If Japan is to lift itself from disaster, enormous effort will have to be expended by a great many people. Tens of thousands are already working together under extreme pressure toward this goal, in the hardest hit Tohoku region, around the nuclear reactors in Fukushima, and throughout the nation and world. Millions more have donated generously, and wish they could do more.

For the many people around the world who care deeply about Japan, this book is a snapshot of a nation in crisis, told by the people affected, in their own voices.


Our Man in Abiko

Chiba

Linda Yuki Nakanishi Kiyomu Tomita Names Here is a photograph dated - photo 3

Linda Yuki Nakanishi

Kiyomu Tomita Names Here is a photograph dated 13 March by Kiyomu - photo 4

Kiyomu Tomita

Names

Here is a photograph, dated 13 March, by Kiyomu Tomita, one of the first independent journalists who entered the area after the quake and tsunami. "A girl huddles herself," he tweeted. "She has lost her family. In Nobiru."

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