Mike's Blog
My son Mike has a thing about ruins. Japan- where he lives- is dotted with abandoned buildings- some from the boom years, some much older. Where we'd call in the demolition men- or strip out the insides and build luxury apartments- they just walk out the front door and leave the premises to rot- often with the furnishings intact. They've got a name for these hulks; they call them haikyu. Mike explores haikyu- and blogs about them- and on Saturday he got a very tasty review in the Guardian.
no subject
I love neglected houses, and what people leave, & the 'ghosts' that remain
Have bookmarked him... ;)
no subject
I love ruins too- but I prefer them to be in the possession of English Heritage :)
no subject
I particularly like the abandoned chairs and the ruins of the sex industry articles.
I diverted to your book.
Good reviews there :-)
x
no subject
I particularly like his chair photos.
no subject
Congratulations, proud dad!
no subject
The chair photos are my favourites.
no subject
no subject
I guess the huge population is all concentrated in a few very densely built up urban areas.
no subject
Awesome!
no subject
no subject
Browsing his blog, I realized that I'd read one of his stories before: "Isidro's Furnace," in Reflection's Edge (January 2005). I liked it then, too.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Now I'm going to check out Michael's website.
I am a Capricorn -- we all love old things, old places, ancient history, old people, etc. Haikyu (this is new to me) should be right up my alley.
no subject
no subject
I've got a third child- Joe- who went into the army and served in Iraq. He's out now and working as a personal trainer. He has writerly ambitions too
no subject
no subject
no subject
Also it`s been good to hear what people liked- I`ll be putting more posts up along the lines of the 10 abandoned chairs one and ruins of the sex industry soon.
no subject
That's an awfully good photo- by the way- the one they used. Your pictures get better and better. I particularly like the chairs. Have you been back to the publishers who din't think the photos were good enough for a book? I think they'd think differently now.
no subject
no subject