Lesley Downer’s romance with Japan: interview by the Japan Times

Author Lesley Downer’s romance with Japan is no fleeting affair

British writer, historian and journalist Lesley Downer has been visiting Japan and writing about it for nearly 35 years — beginning in 1978, when she was part of the first-ever intake of the English Teaching Recruitment Program, which evolved into the famous JET (Japan Exchange and Teaching Program) scheme.

Since then, she has presented a popular BBC series on Japanese cookery, as well as making a documentary titled “Journey to a Lost Japan” for Britain’s Channel 4 TV and New York-based WNET, and one in Japanese on NHK TV, titled “Journey of the Heart” — each about her journey in the footsteps of a trek made by haiku poet Matsuo Basho (1644-94) that inspired his 1689 masterpiece, “The Narrow Road to the Deep North.” […]

Interview by Victoria James

First published on 1 July, 2012

Click here to read full interview on the Japan Times website

Lesley Downer: Love, war and geisha

Lesley Downer’s seven books range widely in genre and subject. Here she reflects on their inspiration and her experiences writing them.

[…] “Across a Bridge of Dreams” (2012): Just published, Downer’s third novel completes an informal trilogy, with a gripping narrative of star-crossed love between a Satsuma girl and an Aizu boy as the civil-war years reach their dramatic endgame with the rebellion of Saigo Takamori (whom the author veils as “General Kitaoka”).

” ‘Across a Bridge of Dreams’ fell together for me very easily. It had to be North and South, Aizu and Satsuma — it had to be Romeo and Juliet.”

Article by Victoria James

First published on 1 July, 2012

Click here to read full article on the Japan Times website