
Holiday Fun Competition (beautiful Little Days)
by (japan) Kikuchi Hiroshi, Tomita Tsuneo, Nogami Akira, Etc.
About This Novel
How the masters take "fun" seriously and thoroughly is the spirit of taking "fun" seriously, which allows the Japanese to develop in various "fun" fields more colorfully. Writers use pens to record various "interests". Some record watching games, some record history, some write about personal experiences, and some write novels. Let us see how the masters take "interest" seriously and thoroughly. They use leisurely writing to tell us that "fun" is not just entertainment or leisure, but another manifestation of life.
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Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 2mo ago
The word "chess" in Japanese mostly refers to Go or Shogi. The rules of Japanese Go and Chinese Go are slightly different, but the difference is not big. Chess players bet their lives on the chessboard, while literary giants get a glimpse of life from the chessboard.
The literary giants have tasted different tastes and embarked on different lives, but what they also have is a heart that always maintains enthusiasm and meets various challenges. And what keeps their hearts alive is baseball, chess, fishing, judo, and sumo wrestling.
Baseball can be called Japan's "national sport". In 1872, Americans taught the Japanese to play, and then it was popularized in universities, high schools and other schools at all levels. People of different ages and identities come to watch and analyze baseball, but they have one thing in common, that is, they love baseball.
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Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 2mo ago
The word "chess" in Japanese mostly refers to Go or Shogi. The rules of Japanese Go and Chinese Go are slightly different, but the difference is not big. Chess players bet their lives on the chessboard, while literary giants get a glimpse of life from the chessboard.
The literary giants have tasted different tastes and embarked on different lives, but what they also have is a heart that always maintains enthusiasm and meets various challenges. And what keeps their hearts alive is baseball, chess, fishing, judo, and sumo wrestling.
Baseball can be called Japan's "national sport". In 1872, Americans taught the Japanese to play, and then it was popularized in universities, high schools and other schools at all levels. People of different ages and identities come to watch and analyze baseball, but they have one thing in common, that is, they love baseball.
