NOBUNAGA samurai icon
🍶 Freshly printed and standing at attention.
Paperback out now. The Kindle edition joins the ranks shortly. All my books in one honorable place.
To the bookstore, swiftly →
NOBUNAGA icon
He fends off bullets for free, but a coffee he cannot refuse.
Your cup keeps this wandering project alive. Thank you, honored friend.
☕ Buy this samurai a coffee
Japan, Explained
Six years.
Six years. In Japan, we hand a six-year-old a backpack built to survive all six years of elementary school. It is called a randoseru. Stiff leather. Hand-stitched. Often made by craftsmen. Frequently strong enough to outlast the child who carries it. Parents save for it. Grandparents save for it. It can cost as much as a nice suit. Then we send it out. The rain. The falls. The overstuffed textbooks. And it just keeps going. Six years on one small back. By graduation it is scuffed. Faded. Shaped by one childhood. A lot of families cannot bring themselves to throw it away.
View original on X
NOBUNAGA samurai icon
🍶 Freshly printed and standing at attention.
Paperback out now. The Kindle edition joins the ranks shortly. All my books in one honorable place.
To the bookstore, swiftly →
NOBUNAGA icon
He fends off bullets for free, but a coffee he cannot refuse.
Your cup keeps this wandering project alive. Thank you, honored friend.
☕ Buy this samurai a coffee

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.