Tokyo New City Guide

Front Cover
Tuttle Publishing, Jul 17, 2012 - Travel - 368 pages
The Tokyo New City Guide goes far beyond the well-worn tourist itineraries and deep into the complex, highly contrasted heart of one of the world's largest and most exciting cities.

This lively, up-to-the-minute Japan travel guide covers modern Tokyo like no other. Here's where you will find the ideal balance between the still-extant traditional Japan with its temples, way of life, arts and crafts, kimono, festivals, customs and cuisine and the crowded futuristic technopolis of electronics, high fashion, contemporary art and architecture, and gastronomic experiences from the four corners of the globe. Bewildering at times, the coexistence of such contrasts is precisely what makes Tokyo tick.

More than just a perfunctory Tokyo guide, this is a handbook for life in contemporary Tokyo. The style is informative, absorbing and witty and, where due, refreshingly frank and critical. Bursting at the seams with information, it is not only invaluable for the short term visitor or the newcomer, but likely to send even the most jaded long-term residents off to explore some new horizons of their many-faceted adopted home.
 

Contents

THE CITY19
19
ACCOMMODATION43
43
RYOKAN54
54
EATING OUT IN TOKYO64
64
JAPANESE RESTAURANTS71
71
HEALTH FOOD RESTAURANTS91
91
SHOPPING DISTRICTS101
101
TRADITIONAL ARTS AND CRAFTS117
117
MOVIES174
174
BARS
180
MUSEUMS
189
CONTEMPORARY ART GALLERIES AND EXHIBIT SPACES198
198
TRADITIONAL ARTS204
204
TEMPLES AND SHRINES211
211
PARKS AND GARDENS217
217
CEMETERIES223
223

HARDWARE125 YOJITOOTHPICKS126
126
FOOD AND DRINK139
139
BOOKS147
147
OTHER SHOPS149
149
TRADITIONAL THEATER157
157
CONTEMPORARY THEATER165
165
OUTSIDE TOKYO232
232
PLANNING247
247
COMMUNICATIONS257
257
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS350
350
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

Mayumi Yoshida Barakan was born in Sapporo and moved to Tokyo in 1974 to attend a local college. After working in the editorial department of a music magazine, she moved to London for a year in 1980. Since returnign to Tokyo, she has worked as a self-employed editor and translator. She now manages the business that she and her husband run.

Judith Connor Greer grew up in Olympia, Washington, and moved to Tokyo in 1980. Starting out in fashion she began freelancing as a writer and arts organizer. From 1986 to 1993 she worked at a Japanese museum of contemporary art. She is now living in London with her husband and two children.

Bibliographic information