Shop SanDisk Ultra 1.024 TB Internal SATA Solid State Drive at Best Buy. Find low everyday prices. User Manual (PDF) Opens a New Window. Feb 21, 2015 There is Donald Richie’s magisterial “The Inland Sea,” Angus Waycott’s “Sado: Japan’s Island in Exile,” Will Ferguson’s “Hokkaido Highway Blues” and a clutch of other titles, before the genre runs into the sand. The Roads to Sata, by Alan Booth. Weatherhill, Nonfiction.
Author | Alan Booth |
---|---|
Country | British |
Language | English |
Genre | Travel |
Publisher | John Weatherhill Inc |
First published 1985; republished September 1, 1990 | |
Media type | Print Hardcover & Paperback |
Pages | 282 pp |
ISBN | 978-0-670-80776-5 (1st Edition Hardcover) |
OCLC | 14399539 |
The Roads to Sata, written in 1985 by Alan Booth, tells the story of his journey in 1977, on foot, from Cape Sōya in Hokkaidō, the northernmost point of Japan, to Sata, the southernmost point of Japan.[1] Booth's journey lasted 128 days and covered 2,000 miles. The book was originally published by John Weatherhill Inc in 1985, but was republished by Kodansha Globe in 1997 in paperback.
References[edit]
- ^関田敬一 (2013). 'Alan Boothの徒歩日本縦断記―The Roads to Sataについて 1'. 英語英文学研究 (in Japanese). Sōka University. 37 (2).
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