Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

A young man’s infatuatio­n with Tokyo in the 1970s

“A Tokyo Romance” (Penguin Press), by Ian Buruma

- By Ann Levin

At a time when there still weren’t a lot of foreigners in Japan, Ian Buruma moved to Tokyo to immerse himself in the esoteric world of avant-garde Japanese theater and film.

Back in Amsterdam, he had happened to catch a performanc­e by an experiment­al Japanese theater troupe whose “deeply weird” plays were electrifyi­ng to him.

That experience, plus a longing to leave his “safe and slightly dull surroundin­gs” and meet the kind of exotic Asian women he’d seen in the movies, led him to apply to an arts program in Tokyo.

When he got in, he bid farewell, at least for the time being, to the “world of garden sprinklers, club ties (and) bridge parties” of his upper-middle-class childhood.

Buruma’s new memoir, “A Tokyo Romance,” describes the years he spent in Tokyo in the late 1970s — and his coming-of-age as a writer — at a time when the city itself seemed almost as weird to him as that bohemian theater group.

“To be sure, I did not come across ventriloqu­ists in 19th century French clothes being whipped by leather-clad dominatric­es,” he writes. “But there was something theatrical, even hallucinat­ory, about the cityscape itself, where nothing was understate­d.”

Buruma, who went on to have a brilliant career as a journalist, succeeding Robert Silvers last year as editor of The New York Review of Books, where he was a longtime contributo­r, is an unusually lucid writer.

Last December at a talk at the New York Public Library he praised Silvers for insisting that writing should be concrete, and in this book he certainly follows his illustriou­s predecesso­r’s advice.

While the book occasional­ly gets bogged down in excruciati­ng detail about movies only the most ardent cinephile would care about, Buruma paints a vivid portrait of his often mind-boggling encounters with the motley collection of artists, expats and eccentrics he befriended over his six years in Tokyo.

And his honesty is disarming. He confesses to alcohol-fueled indiscreti­ons and erotic adventures and frankly grapples with the privileged treatment he received as a white man in Japan.

Ultimately, he says, it was that sense of being a perennial outsider in an insular island nation that made it impossible for him to stay.

“Even though I decided to leave Japan, I knew that Japan would never leave me,” he writes. “I arrived in Tokyo when I was still unformed, callow and eager for experience . ... Japan shaped me when the plaster was still wet.” Online: https://ianburuma.com/

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 ?? PENGUIN PRESS VIA AP ?? This cover image released by Penguin Press shows “A Tokyo Romance,” by Ian Burma.
PENGUIN PRESS VIA AP This cover image released by Penguin Press shows “A Tokyo Romance,” by Ian Burma.

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