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For every 100 copies of the Things Japanese Paperback that are sold before March 15th, 2010, BionicBong will support $500 to Haiti and these causes:

Clean Water - Charity:Water, World Hunger - World Food Programme, Immunization - GAVI-Alliance, Alleviating Poverty - KIVA

If we sell 100 copies we will support $500, if we sell 200 we will support $1000...You get the idea and now it's up to you how much we support.

Things Japanese: A collection of short stories (Volume 1)(Paperback)

A collection of short stories that celebrates contemporary writing on things Japanese. These stories will warm your heart, leave you feeling fuzzy and warm, and crave things Japanese. The stories are rooted in direct experience of things Japanese that explore relationships, perceptions, attitudes, culture, identity, and desire. Theses stories confirm that Japan continues to fascinate and touch people on many levels.

20 Books sold so far!* 80 to go until we reach our first goal of 100. Keep it up!

*updated daily

Stefan Chiarantano (Author, Creator, Editor, Introduction, Contributor), T. Graham Westerlund (Creator), Margaret Grant (Contributor), Setsu Nagatoshi (Contributor), Mindy Mejia (Contributor), Colin O'Sullivan (Contributor), Sonia Saikaley (Contributor), Emily Juniper Ward (Contributor), Jodie Schewitz (Designer)

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Foreign Tourists not landing in Japan

Foreign Tourists not landing in Japan

Submitted By: Jonathan Green 26 January 2010 169 views No Comment

Foreign Tourists not landing in Japan

yokoso

The number of foreign tourists who visited Japan in 2009 plunged 18.7 percent from the previous year to 6.79 million, the first fall in six years, due to the global recession and the spread of the H1N1 strain of influenza in Asia, the Japan National Tourism Organization said Monday.

In 2009, the largest number of foreign tourists came from South Korea at 1,587,000, followed by Taiwan at 1,024,000 and China at 1,006,000. The top three rankings remained unchanged from a year earlier.

Interestingly, while the number of tourists from most countries declined, those from China rose 0.6 percent to hit a record high because Japan eased regulations and began issuing tourist visas to some Chinese individuals in July.

Photo by: OiMax

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