I had previously read a book by former Japanese doctor and historian Junichi Saga, Confessions of a Yakuza, and quite enjoyed it. So when I learned that he had two other books I decided I would read those as well. The first of the two I read was Memories Of Wind And Waves (2002). The other is Memories of Silk and Straw. It is essentially oral histories from Saga's patients-thirty-three elderly men and women who spent their lives working on or around Japan's second-largest lake, Kasumigaura, 60 km northeast of Tokyo in Ibaraki. These stories are mostly from sturdy fishermen and their wives, but some remembrances are from town folk and even one by a local geisha. Saga has done a great service in allowing these people to describe a different time and way of life that was harsh, but also more innocent. There are illustrations in the book by his father, who was also a man of medicine. It was a fascinating portrait of times past in Japan.