Reading Notes: Japanese Mythology, Part A
The Romance of Old Japan by E.W Champney and F. Champney
This week I decided to do my reading notes on Japanese mythology. It seemed as though all of the stories in part A has a sense of natural imagery. I'm assuming this will carry on in part B. It is very easy to picture the setting in which the stories take place. I like how all of the stories jumped right into context, it made the stories much more captivating than if there was some kind of prelude. All of the stories in part A had their own kind of cliffhanger in a way, so that made me eager to read the next story.
This week I decided to do my reading notes on Japanese mythology. It seemed as though all of the stories in part A has a sense of natural imagery. I'm assuming this will carry on in part B. It is very easy to picture the setting in which the stories take place. I like how all of the stories jumped right into context, it made the stories much more captivating than if there was some kind of prelude. All of the stories in part A had their own kind of cliffhanger in a way, so that made me eager to read the next story.
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Kyoto: Maxpixel |
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