Li Jianhong’s Japan Diaries, Day Seven
by BenDecember 15, 2006
We got out of bed at noon to go have lunch with Little Snow. Today she wanted to invite us to eat an Osaka specialty, okonomiyaki, at a little place called Cherry Blossoms. This dish is a little bit like teppanyaki; looks, smells, taste—got them all.Afterwards, Little Snow took us to nearby Kobe to check out a famous street for second-hand goods. This market sprang up under one of Kobe’s light rail lines. It must stretch past several stations, certainly more than a kilometer in length. We entered from 7th St. and went straight in, successively passing 6th St., 5th St….I can’t remember clearly. I liked the part where we started our stroll, which had mostly old stuff like second-hand clothes, digital equipment, antiques, musical instruments, toys, albums, furniture, adult videotapes, a lot of adult manga, used books, and all sorts of other stuff, good quality at a cheap price. The shop owners were mostly middle-aged and elderly people. The things we saw the most of were shoes: old and new, leather and cloth, they had it all, since Kobe is the center of Japan’s shoe production. There was one store that specialized in second-hand Converse shoes; inside and out, the place was crammed full of Converse shoes of every size and shape, style and color. They were distinguished by their place of manufacture: Made in USA, Made in China…. The American ones were naturally more expensive, the Chinese ones were naturally much cheaper, and there were also shoes produced elsewhere at varying prices.
It really was a feast for the eyes, especially all of the toys and figurines, including lots of Japanese cartoon characters, all kinds of toy monsters, and small-sized Japanese antiques—really easy to “waste” time on. In the end, Marqido and itta bought several toy instruments, and my harvest was a pile of monsters to take back. The only one whose name I knew was Godzilla. Little Snow told me several of the other models were also famous Japanese monsters. I was wondering if some might be from Kairyu Daikessen 怪龙大决战 (Battle of the Dragons, 1966), but I couldn’t remember for sure.
As we continued pressing forward, the items on sale got newer. 1st St. and 2nd St. were basically a young person’s world, the majority of the products being fashionable clothes. Nothing there to really turn my head.
When we were done shopping, Little Snow went back, while Marqido, itta, and I continued strolling around Kobe until we were ready for dinner.
When we got back to Osaka, Iida and some of our new friends were all having dinner at his place. His parents had made several dishes, of which one dried, pickled radish dish was especially good, and I ate quite a bit. The Japanese word for “radish” is “daikon” (literally “big root” in Chinese)…such an exciting name! It kept reminding me of the virile male genital organ.
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