A bold, firsthand travel memoir through a still-mysterious Japan, told with wit, patience, and an eye for detail.
Albert Tracy crosses the country on a unique experiment: traveling interior Japan with no guide, relying on chance encounters, local inns, and the rhythms of daily life. The pages blend vivid scenery with practical notes on lodging, meals, and roads, offering a window into a Japan that was changing fast yet retained deep traditions. The book reads like a series of moment-by-moment sketches, full of curious people, temple streets, mountain passes, and the humor found in cultural missteps and mutual misunderstandings.
- Rich scenes of inns, mountain roads, and markets that reveal both hardship and hospitality.
- Observations on travel decisions, language gaps, and the quirks of Japanese hospitality.
- Portraits of towns, temples, bridges, and everyday life that illuminate 19th‑century Japan.
- Practical travel notes for readers curious about gear, food, and navigating a country on foot and by horse.
Ideal for readers of travel memoirs who want a front-row view of Japan’s landscapes, people, and the slow pace of discovery in a world on the brink of transformation.