"The rickshaws always took the road along the Sakura. As the sun went down and it began to get dark, the men would light lanterns on long poles and hang them on the rickshaws, where they'd swing from side to side as we trundled along. And on summer evenings, thousands of fireflies swarmed around, blown like sparks. Sometimes you'd hear frogs croaking: they'd stop suddenly as the rickshaws got near, but once they were past they'd start up again. it was wonderful, with the sound of running feet on the dark path and the moon over the distant mountains."
For getting a look into old-timey life in rural Japan, this was excellent. Saga records the stories of so many different kinds of people -
blacksmith
rice cracker maker
tofu maker
carter
rice farmer
geisha
fishermen
dyer
hairdresser
store-keeper
midwife
to name a few, not to mention the family lives, and what it was like to be a child - what toys they played with(things they made themselves), what they did (work, mostly), what school was like, things they saw, what they ate. Of course, over-riding everything was a yawning, gaping poverty. The people were so poor that they worked for that day's meal, and if they couldn't get that day's work, the family did not eat. The midwife's daughter talked about helping her mother deliver a baby to a woman who lay on the dirt floor of her shack, with not even a mat to lay on, no cloths to wrap the baby in, no diapers, nothing. There was quite a lot of baby abandonment and worse because the people simply could not take care of the children that kept coming. That part was a recurring horror, and the children who survived witnessed the deaths of many newborn siblings.
There were good things too, good moments, beauty - the portrayal of the culture was wonderful. But the poverty! And very young children having to work all day - heavy work, ploughing fields (20 miles of walking), carrying heavy loads, weeding, caring for their siblings - there was not much time to simply be a child.
I especially enjoyed the details of how things were made and done - so many of these skills are lost now, and we need people like Mr. Saga to create a record so they will not be forgotten.
*I'm always on the lookout for books about old ways, especially those from countries other than N. America and Britain - anyone have suggestions?