
A trip to Finland to think
Description
Book Introduction
Anyone who loves Masuda Miri cannot miss this. 'Masuda Advance Ticket' Finland Travel Story! Masuda Miri, an author who finds sparkle in everyday life. Did you know that she, known as a cartoonist and essayist, is also an expert on solo travel? When she first visited Finland alone, she chose a travel agency that helped her from the moment she arrived at the airport to check in at the hotel. Now, she is finding accommodations on her own, visiting familiar places, and setting and achieving her own missions. Just as in her daily life, she navigates all the embarrassing moments she encounters on her travels with her own cheerful and calm demeanor. If you are clumsy, you exist in that moment as clumsy, if you are flustered, you exist in that moment as flustered. |
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index
To begin with
Eat, walk, think
Chapter 1: Thinking Under Finnish Skies, 2017
The day my 'hope' of going to Finland became a 'reality'
I bought a black blouse at the Marimekko main store.
After-meal coffee at Cafe Alto
A day trip by boat to the medieval city of Tallinn
What do you see from your window?
The best sacrament is the sun.
I ordered 'Musician' at Cafe Alto
On the way to meet the cinnamon roll by tram
What I want to say to myself two months ago
The paprika soup at the cafe I went to two days in a row was delicious.
On the last day of my trip, I said goodbye to myself.
Chapter 2: Longing for the Present from the Future (2018)
Finland after a year
Awesome, you did it all by yourself.
The ultimate travel companion, adidas' Boost
A small island zoo on the sea
Take the tram to Hakaniemi Market
Local Restaurant: Trying Yellow Pasta
Two Itala glasses, use them as you please
The popular vegetable burger that I gave up on last year, I'm trying again!
Just looking at the supermarket makes me happy
Don't think, feel!
Bought from Marimekko
At my favorite cafe and my favorite seat
Cinnamon rolls, black tea, and thoughts
Chapter 3: Living by Intuition (2019)
A warm cafe au lait and cinnamon roll that I barely managed to find
Take a boat to Tallinn and experience the winter Christmas market
Trust your gut in this life! Just buy the first thing you like.
Tallinn, a cute but slightly scary fairytale land
Independence Day and Chocolate
What did I order at the cafe?
Let's eat delicious soup today!
In search of Ruth Bruck's work
Reunited with kind smiles at Cafe Alto
Early morning, last bakery pilgrimage
The final mission: eating lunch alone in 'Yuri'
In conclusion
Cinnamon Roll English Conversation
Eat, walk, think
Chapter 1: Thinking Under Finnish Skies, 2017
The day my 'hope' of going to Finland became a 'reality'
I bought a black blouse at the Marimekko main store.
After-meal coffee at Cafe Alto
A day trip by boat to the medieval city of Tallinn
What do you see from your window?
The best sacrament is the sun.
I ordered 'Musician' at Cafe Alto
On the way to meet the cinnamon roll by tram
What I want to say to myself two months ago
The paprika soup at the cafe I went to two days in a row was delicious.
On the last day of my trip, I said goodbye to myself.
Chapter 2: Longing for the Present from the Future (2018)
Finland after a year
Awesome, you did it all by yourself.
The ultimate travel companion, adidas' Boost
A small island zoo on the sea
Take the tram to Hakaniemi Market
Local Restaurant: Trying Yellow Pasta
Two Itala glasses, use them as you please
The popular vegetable burger that I gave up on last year, I'm trying again!
Just looking at the supermarket makes me happy
Don't think, feel!
Bought from Marimekko
At my favorite cafe and my favorite seat
Cinnamon rolls, black tea, and thoughts
Chapter 3: Living by Intuition (2019)
A warm cafe au lait and cinnamon roll that I barely managed to find
Take a boat to Tallinn and experience the winter Christmas market
Trust your gut in this life! Just buy the first thing you like.
Tallinn, a cute but slightly scary fairytale land
Independence Day and Chocolate
What did I order at the cafe?
Let's eat delicious soup today!
In search of Ruth Bruck's work
Reunited with kind smiles at Cafe Alto
Early morning, last bakery pilgrimage
The final mission: eating lunch alone in 'Yuri'
In conclusion
Cinnamon Roll English Conversation
Detailed image
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Into the book
Protecting yourself is important.
But if you guard too much, you may end up with nowhere to run.
Wouldn't it be similar to Othello?
The Othello game we played on the plane.
If you focus only on rain because you are afraid of the opponent's attack, you will end up being blocked by your own stone and unable to move.
Then it will be difficult to recover.
What does it mean to protect?
Could it be similar to avoidance, which is not wanting to dislike or hate someone?
I had that thought while walking down the street.
--- p.36
Overseas travel in your teens or twenties and overseas travel after middle age.
I definitely feel the difference.
It's becoming increasingly rare to plan your future based on your travel experiences or to expect that a trip could be a life-changing moment.
Of course, things are fun now, but losing something is still lonely.
It rained a little at night.
--- p.37
Temperature 18 degrees.
The clothing worn by people walking down the street is truly diverse, from short-sleeved shirts to leather jackets.
The wind of freedom was blowing, saying, "If I like it, that's enough."
I'm wearing a thin wool cardigan with a long-sleeved t-shirt.
He walks along the cobbled street, swinging his arms wildly.
--- p.79
After visiting the Kiasma National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, take the tram to Café Enger.
I had a leisurely vegetable burger for lunch, so I'll finish the evening lightly with tea and dessert.
The window seat was empty.
Carrot cake and rooibos tea.
It's time for some reading.
A luxurious time spent traveling and entering the world of books.
After a long time, I looked up and saw Helsinki Cathedral outside the window.
It's a special seat.
I enjoyed reading, sightseeing, and tea time all at once.
--- p.112
The sun is setting.
A faint crimson light streams in from outside.
Everyone here looks like the people in the painting. When I travel, I think about death more often than usual. Even the people sitting here laughing right now will die someday.
Everyone enjoys this moment, even though they know they will die someday.
For example, if I live a long life and the moment comes when I slowly face death, will I think about today while lying in bed?
I was walking down the streets of Helsinki and I was feeling a bit dizzy, so I looked out the window.
I'm still here.
It's so lively here.
For some reason, I miss the present from the future.
But if you guard too much, you may end up with nowhere to run.
Wouldn't it be similar to Othello?
The Othello game we played on the plane.
If you focus only on rain because you are afraid of the opponent's attack, you will end up being blocked by your own stone and unable to move.
Then it will be difficult to recover.
What does it mean to protect?
Could it be similar to avoidance, which is not wanting to dislike or hate someone?
I had that thought while walking down the street.
--- p.36
Overseas travel in your teens or twenties and overseas travel after middle age.
I definitely feel the difference.
It's becoming increasingly rare to plan your future based on your travel experiences or to expect that a trip could be a life-changing moment.
Of course, things are fun now, but losing something is still lonely.
It rained a little at night.
--- p.37
Temperature 18 degrees.
The clothing worn by people walking down the street is truly diverse, from short-sleeved shirts to leather jackets.
The wind of freedom was blowing, saying, "If I like it, that's enough."
I'm wearing a thin wool cardigan with a long-sleeved t-shirt.
He walks along the cobbled street, swinging his arms wildly.
--- p.79
After visiting the Kiasma National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, take the tram to Café Enger.
I had a leisurely vegetable burger for lunch, so I'll finish the evening lightly with tea and dessert.
The window seat was empty.
Carrot cake and rooibos tea.
It's time for some reading.
A luxurious time spent traveling and entering the world of books.
After a long time, I looked up and saw Helsinki Cathedral outside the window.
It's a special seat.
I enjoyed reading, sightseeing, and tea time all at once.
--- p.112
The sun is setting.
A faint crimson light streams in from outside.
Everyone here looks like the people in the painting. When I travel, I think about death more often than usual. Even the people sitting here laughing right now will die someday.
Everyone enjoys this moment, even though they know they will die someday.
For example, if I live a long life and the moment comes when I slowly face death, will I think about today while lying in bed?
I was walking down the streets of Helsinki and I was feeling a bit dizzy, so I looked out the window.
I'm still here.
It's so lively here.
For some reason, I miss the present from the future.
--- p.123
Publisher's Review
“My life from now on,
“For small things, I just go with feeling.”
● If you love Masuda Miri, you can't miss the 'Masuda Miri Ticket' Finland travel story!
Masuda Miri, an author who finds sparkle in everyday life.
Did you know that she, known as a cartoonist and essayist, is also an expert on solo travel?
When she first visited Finland alone, she chose a travel agency that helped her from the moment she arrived at the airport to check in at the hotel. Now, she is finding accommodations on her own, visiting familiar places, and setting and achieving her own missions.
She overcomes all the embarrassing moments she encounters on her travels, just as she does in her daily life, with her own cheerful and calm demeanor.
If you are clumsy, you exist in that moment as clumsy, if you are flustered, you exist in that moment as flustered.
It's a mystery.
I have no idea where or how things went wrong.
I finished immigration and followed the signs, but I ended up going outside without even reaching the baggage lane.
What will become of my suitcase, yo?_Page 133
Where am I going now?
No, but more than that, what the heck is this bus?
“What should I do…….
What the heck, what's going on here?_Page 134
The image of Masuda Miri, a cute and clumsy yet perfect traveler, gradually awakens our forgotten travel cells.
And here are some delicious foods added to it.
The delicious cinnamon roll bakery she guides us to, along with other hidden gems throughout Helsinki, make it impossible to resist turning on Google Maps.
What on earth does a cinnamon roll taste like, as described as "so delicious it made your nose tingle"?
I ordered a cinnamon roll with coffee.
Take a bite.
Oh, that's right!!
Last time, I came right at opening time and was able to eat something freshly baked and piping hot.
If I'm going to do it, I might as well do it this time too.
I regret it so much._Page 58
There were some twists and turns, but I finally settled down at the Carl Fazer Cafe.
The cinnamon rolls were so delicious they made my nose tingle._Page 135
A travelogue filled with the air of Finland
Looking at it this way, it seems like a trip to eat, but it isn't.
What Masuda Miri truly sought on this trip was not delicious food, but time to think.
Masuda Miri's travelogue isn't about discovering something new and being amazed, being enchanted by local cuisine, meeting new people and learning about their lives, experiencing a new culture, and then conveying something new to us. What Masuda Miri offers us is "the air of Finland."
That fresh air helps me organize my daily life.
Masuda Miri thinks about time, life, and herself while drinking a warm cup of coffee, whether in Helsinki, Finland, or Estonia, where she traveled by boat for a day.
And after a long, long thought she says:
“There were hard times, but my forties were irreplaceable.” For Masuda Miri, traveling is about taking a good look at who I am today.
Not 'new again', but 'properly well' is enough of a reason to travel.
I drank black tea and looked at the trees in the park swaying in the wind.
Falling corn leaves.
The first falling leaves say 'goodbye' to their friends who still remain.
Looking at it with those eyes, I am reminded of the fact that we only live once.
Soon my forties will be over.
I was in my forties when I lost my father.
How many precious people will I lose in the future?
It must be sad.
But even when I'm sad, I'm still hungry.
This is a fact that I, and no one else, taught me._Page 129
● “Amazing! You did it all by yourself.” Masuda Miri’s unique way of protecting herself from the gentle waves of everyday life.
Masuda Miri's three trips to Finland spanned summer, fall, and winter.
I visited Finland in the summer of 2017, then returned the following fall, and again the following winter.
From the perpetual white nights of summer to the long, dark winter, what kind of Finland does she capture? This book is filled with "Masuda Miri's Finland."
In Chapter 1, “Thinking Under the Finnish Sky 2017,” Masuda Miri begins the story with the process of going to Helsinki, Finland.
Her journey begins with writing down her 'wish list' of wanting to go to Finland.
From then on, every time I write in my diary, I open that page and change 'hope' to 'plan' and 'plan' to 'decision'.
So, over the next few months, we gradually approach summer in Finland.
Chapter 2, “Longing for the Present from the Future 2018,” wittily depicts episodes that occurred in Finland, which I returned to after a year.
You can encounter Masuda Miri, who is much more relaxed than on her previous trip, and the small, sparkling everyday life that happens within her.
Chapter 3, “Living by Trusting Feelings 2019,” depicts Finland filled with winter air.
In Finland, where the Christmas atmosphere is strong, she continues her own 'journey to think' by spending time in cafes and bakeries that have become quite familiar spaces.
Masuda Miri quietly praises herself several times during this trip with words like, "Amazing, you did it all by yourself," "Good job," and "You worked hard."
The small encouragement she gives herself, despite her clumsiness and sometimes struggles, is conveyed to us through her writing.
“For small things, I just go with feeling.”
● If you love Masuda Miri, you can't miss the 'Masuda Miri Ticket' Finland travel story!
Masuda Miri, an author who finds sparkle in everyday life.
Did you know that she, known as a cartoonist and essayist, is also an expert on solo travel?
When she first visited Finland alone, she chose a travel agency that helped her from the moment she arrived at the airport to check in at the hotel. Now, she is finding accommodations on her own, visiting familiar places, and setting and achieving her own missions.
She overcomes all the embarrassing moments she encounters on her travels, just as she does in her daily life, with her own cheerful and calm demeanor.
If you are clumsy, you exist in that moment as clumsy, if you are flustered, you exist in that moment as flustered.
It's a mystery.
I have no idea where or how things went wrong.
I finished immigration and followed the signs, but I ended up going outside without even reaching the baggage lane.
What will become of my suitcase, yo?_Page 133
Where am I going now?
No, but more than that, what the heck is this bus?
“What should I do…….
What the heck, what's going on here?_Page 134
The image of Masuda Miri, a cute and clumsy yet perfect traveler, gradually awakens our forgotten travel cells.
And here are some delicious foods added to it.
The delicious cinnamon roll bakery she guides us to, along with other hidden gems throughout Helsinki, make it impossible to resist turning on Google Maps.
What on earth does a cinnamon roll taste like, as described as "so delicious it made your nose tingle"?
I ordered a cinnamon roll with coffee.
Take a bite.
Oh, that's right!!
Last time, I came right at opening time and was able to eat something freshly baked and piping hot.
If I'm going to do it, I might as well do it this time too.
I regret it so much._Page 58
There were some twists and turns, but I finally settled down at the Carl Fazer Cafe.
The cinnamon rolls were so delicious they made my nose tingle._Page 135
A travelogue filled with the air of Finland
Looking at it this way, it seems like a trip to eat, but it isn't.
What Masuda Miri truly sought on this trip was not delicious food, but time to think.
Masuda Miri's travelogue isn't about discovering something new and being amazed, being enchanted by local cuisine, meeting new people and learning about their lives, experiencing a new culture, and then conveying something new to us. What Masuda Miri offers us is "the air of Finland."
That fresh air helps me organize my daily life.
Masuda Miri thinks about time, life, and herself while drinking a warm cup of coffee, whether in Helsinki, Finland, or Estonia, where she traveled by boat for a day.
And after a long, long thought she says:
“There were hard times, but my forties were irreplaceable.” For Masuda Miri, traveling is about taking a good look at who I am today.
Not 'new again', but 'properly well' is enough of a reason to travel.
I drank black tea and looked at the trees in the park swaying in the wind.
Falling corn leaves.
The first falling leaves say 'goodbye' to their friends who still remain.
Looking at it with those eyes, I am reminded of the fact that we only live once.
Soon my forties will be over.
I was in my forties when I lost my father.
How many precious people will I lose in the future?
It must be sad.
But even when I'm sad, I'm still hungry.
This is a fact that I, and no one else, taught me._Page 129
● “Amazing! You did it all by yourself.” Masuda Miri’s unique way of protecting herself from the gentle waves of everyday life.
Masuda Miri's three trips to Finland spanned summer, fall, and winter.
I visited Finland in the summer of 2017, then returned the following fall, and again the following winter.
From the perpetual white nights of summer to the long, dark winter, what kind of Finland does she capture? This book is filled with "Masuda Miri's Finland."
In Chapter 1, “Thinking Under the Finnish Sky 2017,” Masuda Miri begins the story with the process of going to Helsinki, Finland.
Her journey begins with writing down her 'wish list' of wanting to go to Finland.
From then on, every time I write in my diary, I open that page and change 'hope' to 'plan' and 'plan' to 'decision'.
So, over the next few months, we gradually approach summer in Finland.
Chapter 2, “Longing for the Present from the Future 2018,” wittily depicts episodes that occurred in Finland, which I returned to after a year.
You can encounter Masuda Miri, who is much more relaxed than on her previous trip, and the small, sparkling everyday life that happens within her.
Chapter 3, “Living by Trusting Feelings 2019,” depicts Finland filled with winter air.
In Finland, where the Christmas atmosphere is strong, she continues her own 'journey to think' by spending time in cafes and bakeries that have become quite familiar spaces.
Masuda Miri quietly praises herself several times during this trip with words like, "Amazing, you did it all by yourself," "Good job," and "You worked hard."
The small encouragement she gives herself, despite her clumsiness and sometimes struggles, is conveyed to us through her writing.
GOODS SPECIFICS
- Publication date: September 14, 2021
- Page count, weight, size: 184 pages | 300g | 128*188*14mm
- ISBN13: 9791190582520
- ISBN10: 119058252X
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